FYI for all the Mint users, it is going away in January. They haven't done a great job announcing it, probably on purpose. It will be converted over to Credit Karma. During the conversion my understanding is that it will only pull the previous 3 years data. There will also be no budgeting feature if you currently use that in Mint.
That said I've yet to find a great free alternative, but i signed up for Quicken Simplifi yesterday for $2/mo and really like it. The watchlist feature replaces the Mint budgeting feature, and IMO is way better. It shows current spend for a category, the 12 month avg, and projected spend for current month. I was also able to export 12 yrs of tranactions from Mint to CSV and Simplifi can import that format along with all the category tags.
That is all. I'll let you guys go back to the X's and O's discussion.
I've been using Quicken for 30 years. I have found no workable replacement for what it does and what I need it to do. For some stupid reason, I went a year without using it about 15 years ago and my financial planning / life became chaotic because I had no comprehensive understanding of what I was doing.
There are some other programs out there and some open source options, but none of them are easy to use. Quicken is and it works. You can look at the links above and passionate discussions on bogleheads.org but for me it comes down to ... what works, what's going to stick around, what's the most bang for the buck and what handles just about everything that I throw at it including some complex stock option / restricted stock stuff. Quicken is clearly the answer and the bugs are few and far between these days. If you have a simple financial life, even moreso.
Some people balk at the $50-$100 each year. For me, it's the best $100 I spend all year long. Same for TurboTax for taxes.
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