I’m using the good ol’ Excel spreadsheet to track expenses, income, NW, etc. Are there any other tools or apps that you guys found useful?

Also shoutout to my fellow spreadsheet power users 😎

  • ambitiousslab@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    For any fans of open-source software out there, I use beancount which I’ve found to be perfect for my needs. I didn’t know much about double-entry bookkeeping when I started using it, but the documentation was very extensive and I learned a lot in the process of picking it up.

    There are a whole collection of plugins and other resources which fit into the tool which help too, like fava which can generate webpages like this based off your data. Beancount is not the only plain text accounting tool, you can find lots of examples here.

  • garam@lemmy.my.id
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    1 year ago

    Money Manager on Android, with PC manager to be able to export to excel and with dashboard.

    5 years worth of data. It’s so much useful

    • FancyPantsFIRE@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Neat — do you manually input data or do you have some kind of scraping set up to feed it? Why a custom site vs pure spreadsheets?

      • TheButtonJustSpins
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        1 year ago

        I have it automating as much as I can - fund prices, crypto holdings and prices. Technically, anything it’s doing can be done in a spreadsheet, but some of the more complicated stuff (like accessing other sites) is significantly easier and more stable here.

        Also does some cool things like the blurring when I want to share a screenshot, calculating what part of my spending is covered by my assets, tracking historical data, etc. Pie charts where I can exclude data points with a click. Includes/excludes data points based on settings.

  • Vlyn@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Back in the day when I first started working I used Excel, but it was a total pain in the butt.

    For the last 10 years I’ve used YNAB (You Need A Budget), it was a single purchase back then and I still have it on Steam and on my phone. Works great, doesn’t cost me a thing, keeps track of every cent (as long as I spend around 20 minutes a month to put all transactions in).

    Unfortunately YNAB switched to subscription only, so it’s a bit difficult to recommend :-/

    • Barrette@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I can still recommend the pre-subscription YNAB. It used to still be available on their website but that’s gone now, too. Supposedly you can still download it through the Wayback Machine. https://web.archive.org/web/20190122064610/https://classic.youneedabudget.com/

      However you want to obtain YNAB 4, it’s going to be a trial but it’s really simple to extend that trial by however long you want. To my knowledge there’s no difference between the trial and the paid version.

      Here I’m talking about YNAB 4.3.857 but this trial date editing probably works on any version of 4.

      1. Install on your computer. Launch YNAB4 for the first time. Click Start Trial.
      2. Close YNAB
      3. Using notepad, open the file %APPDATA%\com.ynab.YNAB4.LiveCaptive\Local Store.lic
      4. Change the <expirationDate></expirationDate> date to be 10 years in the future
      5. Re-open YNAB4. Go to Help->Purchase or Activate YNAB

      You now have 3686 days to enjoy using YNAB4