Personal Development

The 8 Best Budgeting Apps

If you need help reining in your spending and getting your personal finances under control, a budgeting app may be just what you need. There are many budgeting apps to choose from, each fighting to distinguish itself from the others.

Many applications are designed for general personal budgeting, but each has something unique to offer. One app specializes in personal budgeting tools, while another offers bill tracking. One is unique in offering the ability to assign each dollar you have a job, creating a complete money management system. Another offers warnings when you are close to overspending.

The number of money management, personal finance, and budgeting apps is large, so it helps to know which ones are designed with the most users in mind while offering exclusive tools for those with unique needs. We’ve done the hard work for you, creating a list of the best budgeting apps out there.

The 8 Best Budgeting Apps OF 2020

Best Overall: Mint

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Mint is one of the oldest and best-known budgeting apps. Owned by Intuit, the same company that makes Quickbooks and TurboTax, Mint offers an array of features to help you track and manage your money from a giant list of banks, credit card issuers, brokerages, lenders, and other financial institutions.

It comes with a wide range of features, the most useful being its budgeting tools, which lie front and center when you log in. Mint automatically categorizes transactions from linked credit and debit cards and tracks them against a budget you can tweak and customize to your needs.

Get alerts when you go over budget, track spending by category, or look at your overall cash flow to get a well-rounded picture of where your money goes each month.1

Best to Keep From Overspending: PocketGuard

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As the name implies, PocketGuard can help guard you against spending too much. This budgeting app links to all of your financial accounts and helps you track your spending compared to your budget throughout the month.

This app is one of the easiest to set up and connect to your bank accounts. It tracks how much you're earning, follows what you're spending on recurring bills and everyday expenses, and tracks deposits into your savings account throughout a period.

This budgeting app even has a feature to help you track each individual bill and find opportunities to save. PocketGuard looks out for recurring bills from phone, TV, and Internet companies, for example, and helps you find a better deal on your monthly service costs. Not only does it help you track your budget, it helps you lower your spending.2

Best for Type-A Personalities: You Need a Budget

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You Need a Budget has a cult-like following of die-hard fans who lovingly refer to the app as YNAB. You Need a Budget has a unique approach compared to other budgeting apps. Rather than relying on traditional budgeting buckets, you build your budget based on your income, giving every dollar a job in your budget.

These jobs include everything from living expenses to debt payments, savings, or investments. Leaving no dollar unaccounted for forces you to think about every dollar you acquire and spend.

The app is great for individuals or couples working together on their budget. It offers both desktop and mobile interfaces, options to sync your bank accounts automatically or enter expenses manually, and includes debt payoff and goal tracking features to help motivate you to reach your money goals.3

Best for Just Budgeting: Wally

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Wally isn’t the easiest app to navigate compared to some others on this list, but it works well for one thing: budgeting. This app helps you track your income and expenses while offering you a snapshot of your remaining budget to help you avoid overspending.

More popular with Millennials, this app is free to use and has both iPhone and Android versions (the Android version is called Wally+). One major benefit of Wally is its built-in support for virtually all foreign currencies, which makes it a better option for those who live outside of the United States.

Best for Cash Style Budgeting: Mvelopes

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Cash budgeting lends itself well to envelope budgeting, a style of budgeting where you put cash in envelopes for different spending categories, and, when each envelope is empty, your budget for that category is all spent for the month. This is a bit more challenging with credit and debit cards, but Mvelopes makes it easy to follow cash style budgets in a digital budgeting world.

While it isn’t free, Mvelopes offers the ability to connect to unlimited financial accounts and put classic envelope budgeting to use to track your regular spending. With real-time budget matching, you will know whether you can buy that cappuccino or need to wait for your budget to reset next month.5

Best for Couples: Goodbudget

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Formerly known as Easy Envelope Budget Aid or EEBA, Goodbudget is a perfect option for couples that want to share their budgeting process together. It uses the familiar envelope budgeting philosophy to power your proactive budget for all of your bills and spending.

Because you can share and sync budgets with budgeting partners across the iPhone and Android spectrum, it is great for couples with shared finances, while working great for solo budgeters also.

When you add new transactions, you have the option to add a number of details, breaking up your expenses into multiple envelopes. Budget by category (called envelopes in the app) with up to 10 envelopes for free. Add to your envelopes from your income every payday and you’ll know just how much you have leftover for non-essential purchases.6

Best App Tied to a Bank Account: Simple

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Simple is more than a budgeting app, it is an online bank account that replaces your old checking account and has tons of useful budgeting features built-in. When your budget and your bank live in the same app, it is much easier to manage and keep everything under control because you only have one place to visit to view and manage your money.

Simple tracks your income and spending automatically, and has a goal feature to motivate your savings. It’s trademarked Safe-to-Spend® feature tells you if you are on your budgeting track, or if extra spending might derail your plans. With no fees, this is a very cool all-in-one banking and budgeting app.7

Best for Investors: Personal Capital

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Personal Capital offers a complete investment advising solution, a hybrid robo-advisor, and human advisor service in one. Without paying a cent, you can access Personal Capital’s free money tracking dashboard, which includes some handy budgeting features.

Personal Capital put the majority of emphasis on investments, with free and automated analysis of your investment fees, asset classes and other important investment details.

The cash flow and budgeting tools are not quite as extensive as other apps on this list, but they work just similarly using the same automated tracking of purchases from linked accounts.

Tools

Personal Development Goals – Creativity and Growing Through Doing

Growing into Yourself

It is in the doing that you are expressing being. In expressing being, you’re getting to know yourself. Personal growth comes quickest when learning is coupled with doing. Discoveries in the doing fuel growth and anchor experiences that percolate into wisdom.

Planning personal development goals is about so much more than goal setting. The creative process is as much about creating yourself. In creating, discover, heal, and grow.

The human brain developed over eons through movement and action. Learning through movement is still the physiological process of how the brain learns best. Learning through movement is also learning through doing.  Read more...

“Personality development occurs over time through the experience of living your life. Add intention with a focus on purpose and passion, and your life will soar.” ~LeAura Alderson, Cofounder-iCreateDaily.com

Emotional Intelligence

The hot new buzz word in the business, management, and executive world is “emotional intelligence,” but the question is, what exactly is emotional intelligence? Emotional intelligence, as Ashley Zahabian describes, is applied best when you are feeling a certain way, but act differently to obtain a better outcome. In essence, she claims we become more logical as become more emotionally intelligent.

Ashley shared a few words with us below on the topic:

“It’s one of those “it” factors, you know? When you meet someone, you’ve got a few seconds to connect or disconnect, and that connections happens subconsciously. It’s brain to brain, and unless you’ve got that “it” factor, there’s not much you can do to connect otherwise. This is why so many more companies are moving towards behavioral interviews; they want to see how you behave because your behavior tells much quicker whether you’re credible and fitting for whatever position or connection you’re trying to obtain. Now, to be fair, there is a connective ability for everybody in this world. However, majority of those who are seeking to do well in business need not only high business acumen, but high emotional intelligence too. Most leaders, both in the startup world and in large corporations focus much of their time backing future strategies up with data and logical reasoning, and the rest of their time figuring out how they can convince others to see this problem and solution through reasoning, and through emotional persuasion.”

Leaders think logically, but understand that most people don’t. They find logical reasons to pursue a decision, and then carry on persuading others emotionally to buy-in, while backing their emotional reasons up with logical ones.

This combination of thinking logically, and understanding emotion is what emotional intelligence is. It’s understanding the emotional mind enough to combat it when needed, but use it when needed, too. It’s solving problems from a bird’s eye view rather than being in the picture and being blind to the frame.

Logical thinkers even use emotions as data, and make sure they use all of the data when making a decision. This is what makes it easier, specifically in business, to run successfully. When you use every data point possible, you have a more accurate picture of where to head next. When you make emotional decisions, however, you miss out on important data and make decisions based on anxiety; this usually fails quickly.

When we think anxiously rather than logically, we also struggle to innovate. This is because we are constantly looking at our competition, anxious to fail against them. In these cases, we simply follow the steps of competitors and fail to think outside of the box to beat the competition. These are common traits of businesses that are not first to market new ideas and contributions.

If you are trying to start a business, or manage an existing one, becoming more logical and improving your emotional intelligence can really help you make better strategic decisions.