Budgeting apps have gotten a lot better — and a lot more expensive. With Mint now shut down and the market shifting to premium subscription tools, the landscape in 2026 looks different than it did just two years ago. Here’s a breakdown of the top options and which one is right for you.
Quick Comparison
| App | Price | Best For | Platform |
|---|---|---|---|
| YNAB | $14.99/mo or $99/yr | Zero-based budgeting, debt payoff | iOS, Android, Web |
| Copilot | $13/mo or $95/yr | Apple users, clean UI | iOS, Mac |
| Monarch Money | $14.99/mo or $99/yr | Couples, net worth tracking | iOS, Android, Web |
| Simplifi by Quicken | $3.99/mo | Budget-conscious users | iOS, Android, Web |
| Empower (Personal Capital) | Free | Investment tracking | iOS, Android, Web |
YNAB (You Need a Budget)
YNAB is the most opinionated budgeting app on this list — and that’s its biggest strength. The philosophy: every dollar gets a job. You assign every dollar of income to a category before spending it. This forces intentionality that no passive tracking app can replicate.
Best features: real-time sync, goal tracking, loan payoff tools, strong community and educational content
Downsides: steep learning curve, priciest option for individuals
Best for: people serious about paying off debt or breaking the paycheck-to-paycheck cycle. YNAB consistently reports users save $600 in their first two months — though that’s self-reported data, it matches the experience of millions of users.
Copilot
Copilot is the premium choice for Apple ecosystem users. The iOS and Mac app is genuinely beautiful, and it’s consistently praised for how it handles automatic transaction categorization. Setup takes minutes, and the default categories are well-thought-out.
Best features: seamless Apple integration, smart auto-categorization, clean spending trends
Downsides: no Android app, no zero-based budgeting methodology
Best for: iPhone/Mac users who want a low-friction, visually appealing way to track spending without a major behavioral overhaul
Monarch Money
Monarch was built to replace Mint — and for couples especially, it’s the best option. Shared budgets, collaborative goals, and strong net worth tracking make it ideal for households managing finances together.
Best features: couples features, investment tracking, customizable dashboards, clean UI
Downsides: similar price to YNAB without the same methodology depth
Best for: couples and households, people who want robust net worth tracking alongside budgeting
Simplifi by Quicken
If you don’t want to spend $100/year on a budgeting app, Simplifi at $3.99/month ($48/year) is the best value option. It’s not as powerful as YNAB or as polished as Copilot, but it covers the basics — spending tracking, budgets, bill reminders — without a premium price tag.
Best for: budget-conscious users who want automatic tracking without paying for premium features they won’t use
Empower (formerly Personal Capital)
Empower is free and excellent for investment and net worth tracking. The budgeting tools are basic, but the portfolio analysis, fee analyzer, and retirement planner are genuinely useful. If you have significant investments and just want basic spending visibility, Empower is worth having in your toolkit.
Best for: investors who want to track net worth and portfolio performance alongside basic expense tracking
What Happened to Mint?
Intuit shut down Mint in early 2024 and redirected users to Credit Karma, which doesn’t offer the same budgeting functionality. Former Mint users largely migrated to Monarch Money (the most Mint-like replacement) or YNAB (for users ready to take budgeting more seriously).
How to Choose
The best budgeting app is the one you’ll actually use. A few questions to narrow it down:
- Do you want to change your relationship with money? → YNAB
- Are you on iPhone/Mac and want something beautiful with minimal effort? → Copilot
- Are you managing finances with a partner? → Monarch Money
- Do you want free investment tracking? → Empower
- Do you want to spend the least possible? → Simplifi
Most of these apps offer a free trial. Start there before committing.
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See also: The 50/30/20 Budget Rule Explained