Best Budgeting Apps for 2025: Pick by Style, Not by Star Rating
Last reviewed: June 2026
The best budgeting app isn’t the one with the most five-star reviews. It’s the one whose method matches how your brain actually treats money. Pick the style that fights your personality and you’ll quit by February.
So this isn’t a leaderboard. It’s a sorting guide. Budgeting apps come in three real flavors (automatic trackers, zero-based planners, and digital envelope systems) and the right pick depends on whether you want the app to do the work, or you want to do the work and have the app keep score. Get that one decision right and the rest is detail.
One more thing up front: Intuit shut down Mint on March 23, 2024, and pushed users toward Credit Karma. If you’re reading old “best of” lists that still crown Mint, that’s why nothing matches. The apps below are the ones people actually moved to.
This article provides educational information only and does not constitute financial or legal advice. App features and prices change, so confirm current details on each app’s own site before you pay.
Key Takeaways
| App | Budgeting Style | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Monarch Money | Automatic tracking | Couples |
| Copilot | Automatic, design-forward | iOS users |
| Rocket Money | Automatic plus subscription hunting | Canceling unwanted subscriptions |
| YNAB | Zero-based budgeting | Every dollar gets a job |
| EveryDollar | Zero-based, simpler | Easier zero-based entry |
| Goodbudget | Envelope budgeting | Shared manual control |
- Match the app to your style first. Automatic trackers (Monarch, Copilot, Rocket Money) do the categorizing; zero-based and envelope apps (YNAB, EveryDollar, Goodbudget) make you assign every dollar a job.
- Manual-entry methods have the highest accuracy and the highest quit rate. If you won’t open the app daily, pick automatic.
- Mint is gone (shut down March 2024). Credit Karma is the closest free replacement for tracking, but it isn’t a true budgeting tool.
- “Free” apps that scan your subscriptions, like Rocket Money, profit when you cancel through them, so read the terms, because that incentive isn’t always yours.
- Most apps connect to your bank through an aggregator like Plaid, not the app itself. Know who holds your data before you link an account.
- Don’t trust a screenshot. Install your top two, run real spending through both for two weeks, and keep the one you actually open.
Start Here: Which Budgeting Style Is Yours?
For a vetted, regularly updated list of tools that can help, explore our AI finance tools directory.
Before you look at a single app, answer one question: do you want the app to track what already happened, or to plan what happens next? That splits budgeting into three styles. The wrong style is the single biggest reason people abandon budgeting apps, so this choice matters more than any feature list.
Automatic tracking, for “I just want to see where it goes”
You link your accounts, the app pulls transactions, and it sorts them into categories on its own. You glance at it once a week. This is the lowest-friction style and the best fit if you’ve quit budgeting before because the upkeep felt like a part-time job. The tradeoff: auto-categorization is never perfect, and seeing a spend after it happened doesn’t stop it.
Zero-based budgeting, for “every dollar needs a job”
You assign every dollar of income to a category before you spend it (savings, rent, groceries, fun) until you’ve allocated down to zero. It’s the most powerful method for actually changing behavior because you decide on purpose, not in hindsight. The catch is real work: you check in often and move money between categories as life happens. That friction is the feature.
Envelope budgeting, for “I overspend in specific categories”
A digital version of stuffing cash into labeled envelopes. Each category gets a set amount; when an envelope is empty, you’re done spending there for the period. It’s the right pick if your problem isn’t your whole budget, just dining out or impulse shopping. Some envelope apps stay fully manual on purpose, because typing in a $14 lunch makes you feel it.
| If your answer is… | Your style is | Apps to start with |
|---|---|---|
| “I just want to see where the money goes” (track what already happened) | Automatic tracking | Monarch Money, Copilot, Rocket Money |
| “Every dollar needs a job before I spend it” (plan what happens next) | Zero-based budgeting | YNAB, EveryDollar |
| “I overspend in a few set categories” (cap specific buckets) | Envelope budgeting | Good budget |
The Apps, Grouped by Style
Six apps people actually use in 2025, sorted by the three styles. For each: who it’s for, what the free tier really gives you, and the catch nobody mentions in the App Store blurb. Prices and free-tier limits shift, so treat anything specific as “check the current page” because the structure is what stays true.
Monarch Money, automatic, built for couples
Monarch picked up a lot of ex-Mint users. It links accounts, tracks net worth, handles shared household budgets with a partner, and lets you customize categories more than most. Style: automatic tracking with optional planning on top. The catch: there’s no free tier, it’s subscription-only after a trial, so you’re paying for the polish. Worth it if you and a partner need one shared dashboard.
Copilot, automatic, design-forward (iOS)
Copilot is the one design nerds love: clean interface, smart auto-categorization that learns your corrections, and good net-worth tracking. Style: automatic. The catches are real: it’s Apple-only (no Android, no web for the core experience) and subscription-based with no permanent free tier. If you live in the Apple ecosystem and want the nicest-looking option, this is it.
Rocket Money, automatic, plus subscription hunting
Rocket Money tracks spending and flags recurring subscriptions you forgot about, the $612-a-year streaming pile you meant to cancel. It has a free tier for basic tracking. Here’s the honest part: its subscription-cancellation service can take a cut of what it saves you, and an app that profits from your subscriptions has its own incentives. Read the terms. Great for finding leaks, less ideal as your only budget.
YNAB, zero-based, the gold standard
You Need A Budget is the serious zero-based tool. Every dollar gets a job, and the app drills its method hard with a real learning curve. People who stick with it tend to swear by it. Two catches: it’s one of the pricier subscriptions with no free tier (just a trial), and it demands engagement, because YNAB on autopilot doesn’t work. Pick it if you want the method to change your behavior, not just report it.
EveryDollar, zero-based, simpler entry point
From Ramsey Solutions, EveryDollar is zero-based budgeting with a gentler ramp than YNAB. The free version works but is manual, so you type transactions in yourself. The paid tier adds automatic bank syncing. Style: zero-based. The catch: the free tier’s manual entry is exactly the friction that makes some people quit, so be honest about whether you’ll keep up. Good for budgeting beginners who want structure without YNAB’s intensity.
Goodbudget, envelope, for shared manual control
Goodbudget is the digital envelope system. You divide income into envelopes and spend from them; it syncs across two phones, which is handy for couples splitting categories. It’s deliberately manual (no bank linking on the core plan) and there’s a free tier with a capped number of envelopes. The catch is the same as its strength: manual entry. If you won’t log spends, the envelopes drift. Best for people whose problem is a few runaway categories.
| App | Free tier? | What the free tier does | What paying unlocks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monarch Money | No, trial only | Nothing past the trial; subscription required to keep using it | Full automatic tracking, net worth, shared household budgets |
| Copilot | No, trial only | Nothing past the trial; iOS subscription required | Automatic tracking and net worth on Apple devices |
| Rocket Money | Yes, basic | Spending tracking and subscription detection | Subscription-cancellation service (can take a cut of what it saves) |
| YNAB | No, trial only | 34-day free trial, no permanent free tier | Full zero-based budgeting; about $109/year (annual) as of 2026 |
| EveryDollar | Yes, manual | Manual zero-based budgeting, unlimited categories, no bank link | Automatic bank syncing and reports; about $79.99/year (annual) as of 2026 |
| Goodbudget | Yes, limited | Manual envelope budgeting with a capped number of envelopes | More envelopes and accounts plus added history |
Side-by-Side: Style, Free Tier, and the Catch
Use this to narrow to two apps, not to crown a winner. The “catch” column is the one most roundups skip, and it’s usually what makes you quit or switch later. Confirm any current price on the app’s own site.
| App | Style | Free tier? | Best for | The catch |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monarch Money | Automatic | No (trial only) | Couples wanting one shared dashboard | Subscription-only; you pay for polish |
| Copilot | Automatic | No (trial only) | Apple users who want the nicest UI | iOS-only; no permanent free tier |
| Rocket Money | Automatic + sub-finder | Yes (basic) | Hunting forgotten subscriptions | Can take a cut of what it cancels for you |
| YNAB | Zero-based | No (trial only) | Behavior change, not just tracking | Steep learning curve; pricier; needs engagement |
| EveryDollar | Zero-based | Yes (manual) | Beginners wanting structure | Auto-sync is paid; free tier is manual entry |
| Goodbudget | Envelope | Yes (limited) | Couples taming a few categories | Manual by design; envelopes drift if you skip logging |
The 2-Week Test That Beats Any Review
Reviews tell you what an app does. They can’t tell you whether you’ll open it. So run a cheap experiment with your own money before you commit a dollar.
- From the table, pick the two apps that match your style and platform. Don’t pick four, because you won’t keep up with four.
- Install both. Start free trials at the same time so the clock runs together.
- Link the same real accounts (or, for manual apps, log the same real spending) to each for 14 days. Real transactions, not a fake $5,000 test budget.
- Each evening, notice which app you reached for without forcing yourself. That instinct is the answer.
- After two weeks, check categorization accuracy and how the budget made you feel: nagged, in control, or ignored.
- Cancel the loser before any trial bills you. Keep the one you actually used and set a yearly reminder to re-check the subscription.
If you’re new to all of this, a budgeting app sits on top of bigger fundamentals. It works best once you understand what personal finance actually covers and why income, spending, and saving fit together. The app is the scoreboard, not the game.
Before You Link a Bank Account: Security and Who Holds Your Data
Linking your bank to a budgeting app means a third party gets a read-only window into your transactions. That’s normal, but know how it works. Most apps don’t connect to your bank directly, they use an aggregator, usually Plaid, that brokers the connection. So your data passes through the app and the aggregator, not just one company.
Before you link anything, do three things. Confirm the app offers two-factor authentication and turn it on. Read the privacy policy for whether your data is sold or shared for marketing, because a free app makes money somewhere. And check that connections are read-only, meaning the app can see transactions but can’t move money. The FTC’s guidance on protecting your privacy on apps is a solid primer on permissions and what to watch for.
If sharing bank credentials makes you uneasy, that’s a valid reason to choose a manual app like Goodbudget or EveryDollar’s free tier, because you trade automation for never handing over a login. Not paranoid, just a different tradeoff.
Common Mistakes That Kill a Budget
- Fighting your own style. Forcing yourself into manual zero-based budgeting when you’ve quit it twice already. Go automatic and accept the tradeoff.
- Over-categorizing. Forty categories looks thorough and turns into a chore. Eight to twelve buckets is plenty.
- Ignoring the alerts. The app warns you at 80% of dining; you keep ordering. The alert only works if you stop. Tie it to a concrete rule.
- Paying before testing. Subscribing for a year off a screenshot. Run the two-week test first.
- No emergency buffer. A budget with zero slack breaks the first time the car needs a repair. Build the buffer alongside the app. Here’s how much to keep in an emergency fund.
Summary
Don’t shop for “the best” budgeting app. Decide whether you want the app to do the work or you do it (automatic, zero-based, or envelope) then shop inside that lane. Once you’ve matched the style, install your top two, run real spending through both for two weeks, and keep the one you reach for without thinking. The free tier you stick with beats the premium plan you ignore. And remember the app only reports money habits, it won’t fix the ones underneath, like a thin emergency fund or a credit score that needs work.
If you’d rather see how machine-learning tools fit into the same picture, this breakdown of AI budget tools for personal finance covers a few names from a different angle. And if you want a free, neutral gut-check on your overall money situation, the CFPB’s financial well-being assessment scores where you stand against a national survey without collecting your answers.
Frequently Asked Questions
What replaced Mint after it shut down?
Intuit shut down Mint on March 23, 2024, and steered users to Credit Karma, which it also owns. Credit Karma is good for tracking spending and credit but isn’t a true budgeting tool. Many ex-Mint users moved to Monarch Money or Rocket Money for a closer all-in-one experience.
Is YNAB or EveryDollar better for a beginner?
EveryDollar is the gentler entry to zero-based budgeting and has a free (manual) tier. YNAB is more powerful and changes behavior more, but it has a real learning curve and no free tier beyond a trial. Start with EveryDollar if zero-based budgeting is new; graduate to YNAB if you want more control.
Can I budget without linking my bank account?
Yes. Goodbudget and EveryDollar’s free tier are built for manual entry, so you type transactions in yourself and never share a bank login. You lose automation, but you keep full control over your data. The downside is that manual entry has the highest quit rate, so be honest about whether you’ll keep logging.
Are free budgeting apps actually safe?
They can be, but “free” means the app earns money another way: ads, premium upsells, or a cut of services like subscription cancellations. Look for two-factor authentication, read-only bank connections (usually through an aggregator like Plaid), and a privacy policy that says how your data is used. If it’s vague, pick a paid or manual option instead.
Which budgeting app is best for couples?
For automatic tracking with a shared dashboard, Monarch Money is built for two people. For the envelope style with manual control split across two phones, Goodbudget syncs well for couples. Pick based on whether you both want hands-off tracking or hands-on category control.
How long before a budgeting app actually helps?
Give it one full month. The first few weeks are setup and cleanup, fixing miscategorized transactions and setting realistic limits. The payoff shows in the second month, when you can compare a real month against your plan and shift money from the categories that ran over. If you’re not opening it by week three, you probably picked the wrong style.