The Six Best Budgeting Sites

Get your financial house in order and online.

By Stacy Rapacon, Reporter

From Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine, March 2009
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With the slow economy and fast-approaching holidays, keeping track of your money can be like a stomach-churning roller-coaster ride.

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If you haven't already done it, now is the time to get your finances under control. The World Wide Web seems to crank out a new budgeting site every time there's a dip in the Dow. So to help settle your stomach and your accounts, we've picked the best Web sites to help you set a steady course for spending and saving.

For a fresh view of your big financial picture, Mint.com is our favorite. The online money-management tool lets you easily track all your accounts: checking, savings, credit, loan and investment. Signing up is fast and free; to get started, you need only provide an e-mail address and zip code, then select a password.

Next, link up your accounts. The site connects to more than 7,500 U.S. financial institutions and is adding more. You have to provide user names and passwords for all your bank accounts, but don't worry: The site maintains a secure connection. All user names and passwords are encrypted so that no one at Mint ever sees them. And you don't provide the site with any personal information besides your e-mail and zip code.

Mint updates all your accounts at least once a day and automatically labels each expense with a category -- groceries, credit-card payments, gas and so on. You can use customized tags to create more-specific categories, and you can add notes to each transaction. The site also offers personalized savings tips, such as suggesting better credit cards for cash rebates and travel rewards.

Mint's sleek screens make even the ugliest of finances just a little bit prettier. Under the Trends tab, the Where You Spend pie charts break down your expenses into a rainbow of categories. Click on a slice and you'll see a new, more-detailed pie chart with its own slices. For example, the food-and-dining category splits into groceries, restaurants, fast food, coffee shops and the like. And the site's SpendSpace bar graphs let you compare your spending habits with average outlays of people in selected cities or states -- or the whole country.

Unfortunately, you can't manually add transactions to your Mint account, so you can't project future costs or tally any extra cash or expenditures. To remedy the latter issue, the site suggests you split ATM withdrawals into separate cash transactions. The Mint's support forums are another weak aspect of the site.

If you're more interested in an online community, we suggest Geezeo.com or Wesabe.com. The latter keeps your budgeting focused. Although you can manage credit and savings accounts on the site, we had trouble uploading that data and stuck primarily to tracking our checking. However, Wesabe lets you manually enter cash accounts and transactions. You can link all your accounts to Geezeo, but we experienced some difficulty when trying to add more than one account from a single financial institution. Also, its investment-account tracker is rather bare bones, listing only your holdings' shares and market values–unlike Mint, whose investment tool tracks fund and stock performance and portfolio allocation. Like Mint, Geezeo automatically tags your expenses; Wesabe invites you to create your own labels.

But the power of Geezeo and Wesabe lies in its participants. Members set goals they share with the community and form groups in which they can support, inspire and advise one another. Wesabe provides tips tailored to your specific situation. Geezeo offers more: expert advice, community confessions, and a marketplace of financial products for you to review and compare.

Although all three of the above sites are secure, some people are still not comfortable linking bank accounts directly to a budgeting site. If that describes you, try BudgetTracker.com or BudgetPulse.com. Both sites let you manually enter your account balances and transactions. You can also schedule bill payments using the sites' calendar features. A limited free account with BudgetTracker includes up to ten bank accounts, 50 calendar reminders and 15 bill-payment entries; an unlimited account costs $2.95 per month. BudgetPulse, currently in beta testing, is free.

Buxfer.com is a site that specializes in group budgeting and IOUs among friends. Perfect for roommates or group vacations, you can invite contacts to join and track shared bills (you can even access Buxfer via a Facebook application). For your individual budget, you can choose either to provide your bank-account information -- as you would with Mint, Wesabe or Geezeo -- or manually add your accounts, as with BudgetTracker or BudgetPulse. Buxfer's free basic membership affords you five accounts, five budgets and five bill reminders; an upgrade to unlimited membership costs $2.79 a month or $21.48 a year. Invite friends to join and for each person who accepts you'll earn a 60-cent credit toward an upgrade.

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Discuss

Reader Comments (21)

Posted by: Craig at 12/05/2008 10:40:42 AM

Thank you for mentioning Budgetpulse in your article. There are so many great tools out there that provide solutions for everyone's needs, that can be helpful especially during these times. We are having a complete site redesign and if anyone would like more information, please feel free to contact me. craig@budgetpulse.com

Posted by: Cheapiness at 12/05/2008 04:32:44 PM

Thanks for the great advice! For more on budgeting, check out www.cheapiness.com

Posted by: M at 12/08/2008 09:30:21 AM

What do you mean "no personal information???" What do you think your account #'s and passwords are?

Posted by: tim at 12/08/2008 11:10:15 AM

I tried to start using Mint.com a few weeks ago, it wont link to a few of my accounts, and it seems like every time i log in they have disconnected another account (all at different places). their customer service is absolutely no help, in fact i cant even get a response from them!

Posted by: jj at 12/08/2008 08:48:59 PM

check out www.chillmybills.com for more great ideas on saving money.

Posted by: nathan at 12/08/2008 10:48:04 PM

I don't really consider mint.com a true budgeting tool. Yes, it is a snazzy way of tracking expenses and I use it without question but the approach to 'budgeting' is convoluted and you can't easily track your progress. I'm sure they'll eventually add support but from what I've found it's not there yet. still a good tool...best of the bunch i think.

Posted by: Tim S at 12/08/2008 11:31:53 PM

I have used a spreadsheet available at myfinancialautopilot.com for budgeting. It has been so simple and easy to use that a few minutes a month keeps me within my budget.

Posted by: Phillip Day at 12/10/2008 10:42:36 AM

As financial counselor, I teach one piece of paper is your budget and forget the silly computer programs. They take too much time and you learn nothing.

Posted by: Tom Jebsen at 12/13/2008 04:13:59 PM

You forgot about my favorite one -- StockGumshoe.com, kind of like snopes for investment scams and demystifying bad newsletter come-ons. Not losing money on bad advisors is just as good as saving it sometimes :)

Posted by: Yodlee Fan at 12/14/2008 05:45:44 PM

Why is Yodlee excluded from this list? Yodlee powers the back end of Mint.com, and has features that Mint.com lacks. Yodlee is free too....

Posted by: Stephen Bowers at 12/29/2008 01:29:59 PM

These sites, by and large, help you "TRACK" your spending, not budget it. daveramsey.com takes a simple approach: This is how much I will receive next month and THIS is how each dollar will be spent. Then, the grown-up will spend as planned. Of course, if the child just does what feels good, no amount of TRACKING will help.

Posted by: Money Saving Tips at 01/02/2009 06:10:20 PM

In the winter, significant savings can be obtained by manually or automatically reducing your thermostat's temperature setting for as little as four hours per day. These savings can be attributed to a building's heat loss in the winter, which depends greatly on the difference between the inside and outside temperatures. For example, if you set the temperature back on your thermostat for an entire night, your energy savings will be substantial. By turning your thermostat back 10? to 15? for 8 hours, you can save about 5% to 15% a year on your heating bill--a savings of as much as 1% for each degree if the setback period is eight hours long. The percentage of savings from setback is greater for buildings in milder climates than for those in more severe climates. In the summer, you can achieve similar savings by keeping the indoor temperature a bit higher when you're away than you do when you're at home.

Posted by: Gayle at 01/12/2009 05:52:39 PM

Are you sure Mint.com is free? I saw a 30 day free trial but it cost anywhere from $7-14 amonth

Posted by: Larry De Palma at 01/19/2009 10:07:32 AM

I must disagree with Mr. Bowers. Mint.com lets you set a budget and then notifies you if you go above your monthly budget, and even tells you when a bank is charging you a fee. There are tons of tracking tools to see how your money is spent, simply based on standard online banking and the generally good descriptions that merchants provide. There are also times when we pay bills automatically due to a lower interest rate, convenience, travel, etc., so if something is not within budget, Mint.com will alert the user to that too. Please check out the system before commenting.

Posted by: Julia at 02/06/2009 06:52:00 PM

Yes, Mint.com is free. Not only are my records on it, but now my (grown) kids are also using it! Also, if you have a Bank of America account, they offer the same thing - it's called "My Portfolio - on their site. Also free.

Posted by: marc at 02/09/2009 11:51:57 AM

Stacy did not mention Pearbudget.com. I do not bank by mail, so I only want to track my expenses against my budget. Pearbudget is very user friendly, will do all the calculations, will give monthly & YTD totals, etc. There is a free trial available.

Posted by: Harei at 02/13/2009 11:07:47 PM

For those who do not want to give out their personal identity or access to their bank accounts, but want to do effective budgeting and personal finance online for free, OOTD (Out Of The Dark) budgeting online is a worthy check. Happy budgeting

Posted by: Max at 03/29/2009 11:29:50 AM

You should check out our site too -- Expensology (expensology.com). The software is free and anonymous -- we do not ask for your banking info. We help you track your expenses, manage your bills, create a budget and more.

Posted by: Aalaf Alot at 04/11/2009 12:24:23 PM

All these programs including Quicken.com...does not allow you to import data, especially years of Quicken or Microsoft Money history.

Posted by: Debbie at 09/12/2009 05:56:43 PM

One online budgeting site that allows you to import data is BudgetToolkit.com. You can import data in Microsoft Money format (OFX) and Quicken format (QIF I believe). A nice site that's worth a look.

Posted by: Mike M at 10/01/2009 05:10:53 PM

Another really good debt tracking and budgeting website is www.debtspark.com. Unlike most online sites debtspark does NOT require you to enter your financial login information or passwords so there is no security risk!

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