The best budgeting app is the one you’ll actually use consistently. Different apps suit different approaches — some automate everything, some require more manual input, some are free, some charge a subscription. Here’s an honest breakdown of the best options in 2026.
YNAB (You Need a Budget) — Best overall for serious budgeters
YNAB uses zero-based budgeting — you assign every dollar a job before you spend it. It’s the most intentional budgeting method available in app form, and users consistently report transformative results. Cost: $14.99/month or $99/year. Free for 34 days. Steep learning curve but powerful once mastered.
Mint — Best free option (now part of Credit Karma)
Mint automatically syncs your accounts and categorizes spending. It’s passive — you look at what you spent after the fact rather than planning ahead. Good for awareness, not as strong for behavioral change. Free, but ad-supported.
Copilot — Best for iPhone users who want automation
Copilot automatically imports and categorizes transactions with impressive accuracy. Clean, beautiful interface. Strong reporting and trends. iOS only. $13/month or $95/year after a free trial.
Goodbudget — Best digital envelope budgeting
Goodbudget is a digital version of the cash envelope system. You allocate money to virtual envelopes and track spending against each. Great for couples who want to share a budget. Free tier available; $10/month for premium.
Simple spreadsheet — Best free option for control freaks
A well-designed spreadsheet beats any app for people who want total customization and zero subscription cost. Google Sheets is free, accessible anywhere, and infinitely customizable. The downside: no automatic transaction import — you track manually. This is actually an advantage for some people, since manual tracking increases awareness.