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By Personal Finance Tools Team

Free Budgeting Apps Are Disappearing—Here's What Still Works Without Paying


PocketGuard quietly removed its free tier last month. No announcement, no grace period—just a paywall where the free app used to be. Annual price: $74.99/year, up from $34.99 in 2023.

This isn’t an isolated move. It’s the end of a pattern that started when Intuit shut down Mint in March 2024 and accelerated through 2025 as every remaining budgeting app either raised prices or killed free access entirely.

If you’re looking for a free budgeting app in 2026, your options have shrunk dramatically. Here’s an honest look at what happened, what’s left, and whether paying actually makes sense for your situation.

The Free Tier Graveyard

A quick timeline of what we’ve lost:

  • Mint (free, ad-supported) — shut down March 2024, users migrated to Credit Karma
  • PocketGuard Free — removed February 2026, now $74.99/year only
  • EveryDollar Free — gutted in late 2024, free version no longer connects to banks
  • Goodbudget Free — still exists but limited to 10 envelopes (down from 20)

And the apps that were never free have gotten more expensive:

App2023 Price2026 PriceIncrease
YNAB$99/year$109/year+10%
Monarch Money$99/year$99/yearHeld steady
Copilot Money$70/year$95/year+36%
Simplifi by Quicken$48/year$60/year+25%
Rocket Money Premium$48-72/year$60-144/year+25-100%

The average cost of a full-featured budgeting app is now $60-168/year. That’s $5-14/month to track your money. The irony isn’t lost on anyone.

Why Free Died

Two forces killed free budgeting apps.

First: Plaid and bank connections cost real money. Every time an app syncs your bank account, it pays Plaid (or MX or Finicity) for that connection. Mint subsidized this with ads and by selling anonymized spending data. When Intuit decided the data business wasn’t worth it, Mint died. PocketGuard tried to keep free going but couldn’t make the math work at 10 million users.

Second: the open banking delays made it worse. Section 1033 was supposed to force banks to share your data directly with apps for free. The rule is stuck in legal challenges, so apps still pay intermediaries for every connection. That cost gets passed to you.

What’s Actually Still Free in 2026

Here’s the honest list. No “free trials” or “freemium with unusable limits.” These are tools you can use indefinitely without paying.

Goodbudget (Free Tier)

What it is: Digital envelope budgeting. You set spending categories and manually enter transactions.

The catch: Free tier gives you 10 envelopes, 1 account, and 1 year of transaction history. That used to be 20 envelopes—they halved it in 2025.

Who it works for: People who want the envelope system and are willing to enter spending manually. No bank syncing on free. If you buy coffee, you open the app and log $5.40 from your “food” envelope. It’s friction by design, and that friction is the point—you think about every purchase.

Who should skip it: Anyone who won’t manually track. Be honest with yourself. If you’ve tried manual tracking before and abandoned it within two weeks, this won’t be different.

The reality: 10 envelopes is tight but workable. I ran it with: Groceries, Dining Out, Gas, Fun Money, Household, Subscriptions, Clothing, Gifts, Health, and a catch-all “Other.” Felt constrained but functional.

Waypoint (Completely Free)

What it is: A newer app built on the premise that budgeting should be free. Launched in late 2025 with bank syncing included at no cost.

The catch: They’re VC-funded and burning cash. Their stated plan is to monetize through optional financial products (savings accounts, credit cards) rather than subscriptions. Sound familiar? That was Mint’s original model too.

Who it works for: People who want automatic bank syncing without paying. The interface is clean, categories are customizable, and it handles split transactions well.

Who should skip it: Anyone uncomfortable with the uncertainty. Will Waypoint exist in two years? Maybe. Will they eventually add a paywall? History suggests yes. If you build your financial system around it, you’re betting on their runway.

Security note: They use Plaid for bank connections (read-only access) and claim SOC 2 compliance. Standard for the industry, but you’re still handing bank credentials to a startup.

Spreadsheet Methods (Forever Free)

What it is: Google Sheets, Excel, or LibreOffice Calc with a budget template.

The catch: Setup takes work. No automatic syncing. You’re building and maintaining the system yourself.

The best templates:

  • Google Sheets Budget Template (built-in, go to File → New → From Template) — basic but functional
  • Tiller Money — not free ($79/year), but if you already have Sheets, their free community templates are solid starting points
  • r/personalfinance sidebar spreadsheets — Reddit’s personal finance community maintains several well-tested templates

Who it works for: People who like control and customization. Spreadsheets do exactly what you tell them to. No surprise feature removals, no price hikes, no company shutdowns. Your data stays yours.

Who should skip it: People who need automation to stay consistent. If you won’t sit down weekly to update numbers, the spreadsheet will be abandoned by month two.

I’ve used a modified Google Sheets budget alongside paid apps for four years. The spreadsheet outlasted Mint, two YNAB price increases, and now PocketGuard’s paywall. There’s something to be said for a tool that can’t be enshittified.

Your Bank’s Built-In Tools

What they are: Most major banks (Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Capital One) now offer spending categorization and basic budgeting inside their apps.

The catch: They only see transactions from that one bank. If you have accounts at multiple institutions, you get a fragmented picture.

Who it works for: People with simple financial setups—one checking account, one credit card, both at the same bank. The spending insights in Chase and Capital One have gotten surprisingly good.

Who should skip it: Anyone with accounts across multiple banks. You can’t see everything in one place, which defeats the purpose.

When Paid Apps Actually Earn Their Cost Back

Free is great, but “free” doesn’t automatically mean “best choice for your situation.” Here’s when paying $60-168/year for a budgeting app is genuinely worth it.

You have complex finances. Multiple bank accounts, investment accounts, a mortgage, maybe a side business. Monarch Money or Copilot Money connecting everything in one dashboard saves real time and catches things you’d miss manually.

You’re paying down debt. A structured payoff plan with automatic tracking keeps you accountable. YNAB’s debt payoff features and Monarch’s new Goals 3.0 both handle this well. If you’re carrying $20K+ in high-interest debt, a $99/year app that keeps you on a payoff plan saves thousands in interest.

You have subscription creep. Rocket Money found $340/year in forgotten subscriptions when I ran it. At $60/year for the basic plan, that’s a 5.7x return. Not everyone has that much waste, but most people have some.

You’ve tried free tools and quit. If manual tracking doesn’t stick for you and you know it, a paid app with automatic syncing is the cost of maintaining the habit. That’s a valid trade-off. The most expensive budgeting app is the one you don’t use.

The Math on Paid vs. Free

Let’s be concrete. Say you’re considering Monarch Money at $99/year.

For that $99 to pay for itself, you need to either:

  • Find $99 in spending you wouldn’t have caught otherwise
  • Avoid one overdraft fee ($35) + one late payment fee ($29) + save $35 in spending adjustments
  • Stay on a debt payoff plan that saves you $99+ in interest annually

For most people with at least moderate financial complexity, a good budgeting app clears that bar. But if you’re on a tight budget, have simple finances, and are disciplined enough for manual tracking, spending $99 to manage your money is money you could just… manage.

A Practical Setup for $0

If you want a complete budgeting system without spending anything:

  1. Goodbudget (free) for daily spending tracking with envelopes. Covers groceries, dining, discretionary.
  2. Your bank app for account balances and automated bill tracking.
  3. A simple spreadsheet for monthly net worth tracking and big-picture planning.
  4. Calendar reminders for bill due dates (replaces the “bill reminder” feature of paid apps).

This takes more effort than a $99 app. About 20 minutes per week for data entry and review versus 5 minutes with automatic syncing. But it works, it’s free, and no company can take it away from you.

What to Do If You Were on PocketGuard Free

If you just lost your PocketGuard free tier, here’s the immediate playbook:

  1. Export your data now. Go to Settings → Export. PocketGuard gives you a CSV. Do this before your account gets locked down.
  2. Don’t panic-subscribe. PocketGuard is banking on inertia—people paying $75/year because their data is already there. Your data is a CSV file, not a hostage.
  3. Try Waypoint if you want automatic bank syncing to continue. It’s the closest free replacement.
  4. Try Goodbudget if you’re open to manual tracking. The envelope system is a genuine behavior upgrade over PocketGuard’s “in my pocket” approach.
  5. Try Simplifi if you’re willing to pay but want the cheapest full-featured option at $60/year (that’s $15 less than PocketGuard is now charging).

The Bigger Picture

The free budgeting app era is over. It lasted roughly from 2007 (Mint’s launch) to 2024 (Mint’s death), and the stragglers are being picked off now. The business model—free app subsidized by data sales or advertising—turned out to be unsustainable or, in Mint’s case, not profitable enough for the parent company.

What replaced it is a subscription economy where budgeting costs $60-168/year. That’s a real expense, and for people who are budgeting specifically because money is tight, it’s a frustrating catch-22.

But free options do still exist. They require more effort, they have real limitations, and at least one of them (Waypoint) might not be around in two years. The spreadsheet will always be there. Your bank’s built-in tools will keep improving. And manual tracking, annoying as it is, builds better money awareness than any automated app.

Pick the tool that matches your honesty about your own habits. If you’ll actually do the manual work, go free. If you won’t—and many of us won’t—a paid app that you use beats a free app that you abandon.


Pricing verified as of March 2026. These things change fast—check current rates before subscribing to anything.