Читать книгу Retirement Planning For Dummies - Matthew Krantz - Страница 35

Checking out other money-tracking options

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In addition to Mint, Quicken, and Excel, consider whether one of the following fits your lifestyle best:

 Personal Capital: This powerful free app and website was built by former Quicken engineers to help you get set up more quickly (no software installation needed). Like Mint, Personal Capital, shown in Figure 2-5, requires you to enter the username and password of each of your financial accounts. The site then pulls in your financial transaction data and helps you see where your money is going. The app also features robust tools to manage your retirement account. More on that later, in Chapter 9. For now, just know that Personal Capital will look at all your spending and calculate your run rate.FIGURE 2-5: Personal Capital helps you see where your money is going. Personal Capital is a financial advisory firm. After you sign up for the online budgeting service, you will be contacted by a salesperson who will try to sell you a financial advisory service.

 YNAB: An app and website that helps you control your spending, not just track it, YNAB (you need a budget) connects to your bank accounts and downloads your financial transactions. It’s up to you to put them into categories. You can manually enter transactions, too. YNAB wins fans but at a cost of $6.99 a month. If you sign up for a year subscription and cancel before the year is up, your refund is prorated. And there’s a month-long free trial. But paying money to save money seems a little counterintuitive.

 Mvelopes: Like YNAB, Mvelopes is for the mobile generation. The system pulls in all your bank information (see a trend here?), and helps you see the categories consuming your cash. The system, which is supposed to mimic putting a set amount of money into envelopes, helps you stick to a budget.Let’s say you allow yourself $300 a month for eating out. Mvelopes will monitor your spending during the month and show you how much of your monthly dining out allowance you’ve used. That way, if you’re only halfway through the month and have used, say, 90 percent of your $300 allowance, you'll know you should skip the steak dinner your friends are planning (or talk them into pushing the event back a month).Mvelopes isn’t free. The Basic version costs $4 a month and provides the reports you need to calculate your run rate. You can get tips from a financial trainer every quarter for $19 a month or monthly for $59 a month. Again, paying money to save money is hard for me to justify.

Retirement Planning For Dummies

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