Copilot Money Review 2026: AI Budgeting That Actually Learns How You Spend
I found $847 I didnât know I was spending. Not through careful budgeting or a spreadsheet auditâjust by opening Rocket Money for the first time.
Two streaming services Iâd forgotten about after trials ended. A gym membership from a location that closed. A meditation app I downloaded once in 2023. And the one that hurt: a $19.99/month âpremiumâ service Iâd been auto-charged for 14 months because I couldnât find the cancellation button.
That first audit paid for two years of Rocket Money in one afternoon. But thatâs also the sales pitch, and sales pitches leave things out. After 45 days using it to manage $3,400/month in household expenses, hereâs the honest version.
Quick Verdict
Aspect Rating Actually Changes Behavior â â â â â Ease of Use â â â â â Security/Privacy â â â â â Value for Cost â â â ââ Best for: Anyone who suspects theyâre paying for things theyâve forgotten, people who hate calling customer service to cancel subscriptions, households managing 10+ recurring charges Skip if: You need zero-based budgeting discipline, you want deep investment tracking, or your subscription load is already under control Price: Free (limited) | Premium $6â$12/month (you choose) Security: Read-only Plaid connection, no ability to move money, 256-bit encryption
A household with two incomes, one mortgage, two car payments, and what turned out to be 23 active subscriptions. The goal wasnât budgeting exactly. I already knew I was spending too much on food delivery. The goal was finding the money I didnât know was leaving.
Previous tools: my bankâs built-in spending tracker (couldnât see across accounts), a spreadsheet (accurate but Iâd stopped updating it), and Mint before it shut down.
Connect your accounts through Plaidâsame infrastructure as Venmo and most other financial apps. Rocket Money scans every transaction going back six months and flags recurring charges. Anything billed regularly gets surfaced as a subscription.
From there, you can:
The budgeting side is real but secondary. You set spending targets by category, and the app shows you weekly progress. Itâs tracking-first, closer to Simplifi in philosophy than YNAB.
Rocket Money claims itâs helped users cancel nearly 2.5 million subscriptions. That number makes more sense once you run your own audit.
The detection is good. It caught things Iâd manually skipped over because I didnât recognize the billing name. Lots of subscription services bill under a different company name than the app youâre actually using. Rocket Money handles this with a pattern-matching approach thatâs better than searching your email for âinvoice.â
What made the difference for me was the friction removal. I knew I should cancel some of these. Iâd just kept not doing it because each cancellation involves a different website, a different âare you sure?â flow, sometimes a phone call. With Premium, you mark something for cancellation and Rocket Moneyâs team handles the actual process within 2-7 days.
Thatâs the thing. The subscriptions youâre still paying for after wanting to cancel arenât there because you forgot. Theyâre there because the cancellation process is deliberately annoying. Rocket Money absorbs that friction.
The bill negotiation service is separate from subscription management. You give Rocket Money permission to contact providers (cable, internet, phone) and negotiate on your behalf.
The fee structure is straightforward: if they save you nothing, you pay nothing. If they succeed, you pay 35-60% of your first yearâs savings (you pick the percentage within that range). After year one, you keep everything.
Real math: if they cut your $120/month cable bill to $90/month, thatâs $360 in first-year savings. At 40%, youâd pay $144 for that negotiation. Your net gain is $216 that year, plus full $360 in every subsequent year.
Not every negotiation works. Internet providers are harder than cable. And if youâre already on a promotional rate, thereâs not much to negotiate. But for people whoâve been on the same plan for two or more years without asking for a discount, thereâs often money there.
Link your bank accounts, investment accounts, car loans, and credit cards. Rocket Money builds a consolidated net worth view.
It wonât do what Origin Financial or Simplifiâs KBB vehicle tracking does for deep net worth accuracy. But âhereâs everything in one number, updated automaticallyâ is better than what most people have, which is nothing.
Credit score is TransUnion VantageScore 3.0, same approach as Simplifi, same limitations. It shows your score and some contributing factors. It doesnât tell you exactly what to do to improve it, and it doesnât give you your full credit report by default. For the number-checking use case, itâs fine.
Rocket Moneyâs budgeting uses category-based spending targets, not zero-based allocation. You set a monthly target for restaurants, groceries, entertainment. The app tells you where you stand.
This is a more forgiving model than YNAB or EveryDollar. If you go over on dining, the app shows you. But the framing is informational rather than accusatory. Good for people who want visibility. Not enough if you need strict accountability.
Premium users get unlimited custom budget categories. The free tier limits you to two custom categories, which is almost certainly not enough if you have more than basic expenses.
The âpay what you think is fairâ model sounds generous. In practice, it creates uncertainty.
When you sign up for Premium, youâre asked to choose an amount between $6 and $12/month. The app suggests what âmost peopleâ pay, which nudges behavior. If you pick $6, you might feel cheap. If you pick $12, you might resent it later.
Pick $6. You get the same features either way. The sliding scale is a revenue optimization, not a value difference.
At $6/month ($72/year), the math works if you find $72 in savings within the first few months, which most people with forgotten subscriptions will. At $12/month ($144/year), the bar is higher.
If budgeting is your primary goal (not subscription management), Rocket Money is weaker than Copilot Money, Monarch Money, or Quicken Simplifi at similar price points.
The spending categorization is decent but requires more manual correction than Copilot. The investment tracking is surface-level. And thereâs no equivalent to Simplifiâs advanced transaction rules, Monarchâs AI assistant, or Copilotâs AI-powered learning.
Rocket Money wins on subscriptions and bills. It doesnât win on budgeting depth.
Smart Savings can automatically move small amounts from checking to savings. The intent is good. Automating savings beats willpower-based saving.
But the logic sometimes moves money at awkward times if your income is irregular. Two users in the r/personalfinance community reported overdraft situations caused by Smart Savings transfers on a low-income day. If you have variable income or irregular pay timing, turn off automatic savings and use manual transfers instead.
Credit cards, utilities, and streaming services: not eligible for negotiation. Cable, internet, phone plans: eligible. The limitation makes sense (you canât really negotiate a Netflix price), but it means the service helps a specific subset of your bills.
If your biggest monthly overspend is on utilities or streaming, negotiation wonât help with that.
Connection type: Read-only via Plaid. Rocket Money cannot initiate transfers, move money, or make payments on your behalf. (The bill negotiation service operates through a separate authorization process with limited scope.)
Encryption: 256-bit at rest and in transit.
Parent company: Rocket Companies, the same organization behind Rocket Mortgage and Rocket Loans. A large, publicly traded company with more than the typical startupâs accountability to data practices. They have reputational incentive to not mishandle financial data.
Data sharing: Rocket Moneyâs privacy policy allows sharing with service providers and affiliates. Their data practices are standard for Plaid-connected apps. They explicitly state transaction data is not sold to third-party advertisers.
My concern level: Low. This is a well-funded company using industry-standard infrastructure. If youâre comfortable with Plaid-connected tools generally, Rocket Money doesnât introduce anything unusual.
| Plan | Cost | What You Get |
|---|---|---|
| Free | $0 | Subscription detection, basic 2-category budget, net worth, credit score |
| Premium | $6â$12/month (you choose) | Subscription cancellation by their team, bill negotiation, unlimited budget categories, custom dashboard, account sharing, web access |
The free tier is genuinely useful. If you just want the subscription audit and donât care about having Rocket Moneyâs team handle the cancellations, free covers it. Youâll find everything; youâll just have to cancel yourself.
The premium math works if:
Skip premium if:
On subscription tracking: Rocket Money wins clearly. Copilot and Monarch both detect recurring transactions, but neither has Rocket Moneyâs cancellation concierge or bill negotiation service.
On budgeting: Copilot and Monarch both do more. Better AI categorization, more advanced spending analysis, equity tracking in Monarchâs case. If budgeting is the primary use case, $95-100/year on Copilot or Monarch is better spent than $72-144/year on Rocket Money.
The honest framing: Rocket Money is a subscription and bill management app with decent budgeting features. Copilot and Monarch are budgeting apps with decent subscription detection.
Simplifi at $5.99/month ($71.88/year) does deeper budgeting work: KBB vehicle tracking, better transaction rules, investment projections. But it has no bill negotiation and no subscription cancellation concierge.
If your problem is âI have a mess of subscriptions I need dealt with,â Rocket Money. If your problem is âI want a complete financial picture and Iâll cancel my own subscriptions,â Simplifi.
Clear fits:
Also worth considering:
Skip if:
Rocket Money does one thing better than any other personal finance app right now: it finds the money youâre losing to subscriptions and helps you stop losing it, without you having to do the annoying work of canceling each one.
Thatâs valuable if you have subscription sprawl. Most households that have been digitally active since 2019 do.
The budgeting features are solid enough that you donât need a second app if your needs are basic. The bill negotiation is legitimately useful if your phone or internet bill hasnât been renegotiated in a couple of years.
Start with the free tier. Run the subscription audit. If you find $50+ in monthly subscriptions you donât want, upgrade to Premium and let their team handle the cancellations. At $6/month, youâll recoup it in the first month.
If the audit reveals clean subscription hygiene, stay free. The paid tier isnât compelling without the subscription cleanup use case.
Is Rocket Money legit? Yes. It was originally Truebill, acquired by Rocket Companies (Rocket Mortgageâs parent) in 2022. It uses Plaid for read-only bank connections and has standard FDIC insurance on any savings accounts you use through the app.
How does subscription cancellation actually work? You flag a subscription for cancellation in the app. Rocket Moneyâs team contacts the service provider on your behalf and handles the cancellation process within 2-7 business days. Youâll get confirmation when itâs done. Some subscriptions require a phone call, which their team makes for you.
What if bill negotiation fails? You pay nothing. The fee is 35-60% of first-year savings only if negotiation succeeds. No success, no charge.
Does Rocket Money work for couples? Yes, Premium includes account sharing so both people can see the same dashboard without sharing login credentials. Better than most apps in this regard, though not as sophisticated as Monarch Moneyâs full partner support.
Can I use Rocket Money for free indefinitely? Yes. The free tier doesnât expire. Subscription detection, basic budgeting with 2 custom categories, net worth tracking, and credit score monitoring are all free. Youâll need Premium for the cancellation concierge, unlimited budget categories, and bill negotiation.
What accounts does it connect? Checking, savings, credit cards, investment accounts, and loans through Plaid. Most major banks are supported. Smaller credit unions sometimes have connectivity issues, which is standard for Plaid-dependent apps.
Should I let Smart Savings run automatically? If you have stable, salaried income: probably fine. If you have variable income or tight margins: turn it off and use manual transfers. A few users have reported overdrafts from poorly timed automatic savings transfers.
Tested on a household with two incomes and 23 subscriptions over 45 days. Pricing verified February 2026. Check rocketmoney.com for current pricing before signing upâthe premium range has shifted before.