Budgeting apps are fine if you want to know what you spend last month. And most people quit using them after a few months because they just tell you what you already know – you spent too much last month.
There’s a new breed of budgeting apps, powered by AI, that can give you insights into your spending and how you can save more money before you blow through your budget.
And these are apps that use AI in a smart way, not a marketing gimmick where they slap “AI” on everything. I’ll explain how the introduction of AI makes it a more powerful tool than before.
Short on time? Here’s the summar:y
- Monarch Money – best for couples and AI auto-categorizes transactions, detect recurring bills and subscriptions (so you can cancel it) and surfaces spending trends.
- Origin – best all-in-one that includes budgeting and investing, the AI Sidekick can build a personalized budget that can answer questions you have and forecast for big events. Try it for $1 the first year.
- Boldin – a retirement planning powerhouse that uses an AI Assistant planner that you can ask questions as if it were a financial coach.
- YNAB – uses AI to help categorization, which isn’t mind-blowing, but we include it because YNAB is such a powerful behavior change budgeting tool that we couldn’t exclude it even if the AI features were light.
- Rocket Money – AI will find your recurring expenses and subscriptions and can cancel some of them directly in the app, quick bang for your buck in terms of savings
- Cleo – It’s a chatbot AI that sits on top of your financial data, so you can ask it questions, and it’s the only tool in the list with a free tier
- Empower – Most well known for their dashboard and the AI helps analyzing your spending and budgeting habits and can provide financial guidance.
Table of Contents
- 1. Monarch Money – best for couples
- 2. Origin – best all-in-one (budget + invest + plan)
- 3. Boldin – best for long-term and retirement planning
- 4. YNAB – best for getting serious about saving and debt
- 5. Rocket Money – best for killing forgotten subscriptions
- 6. Cleo – best free pick for people who avoid their finances
- 7. Empower – best free option overall
1. Monarch Money – best for couples
Monarch is the closest thing to a true Mint replacement: clean dashboard, budgets, net worth tracking, and investment monitoring, built for two people to share.
- What the AI does: It auto-categorizes transactions, detects recurring bills and subscriptions, and surfaces spending trends across both partners’ accounts.
- Why that beats a non-AI app: Manual envelope apps fall apart for couples because both people have to tag everything or the budget drifts out of sync. Monarch’s automation keeps a shared household budget reconciled on its own, so the picture stays accurate without nightly data-entry chores.
- Best for: Couples and households budgeting jointly
- Price: Around $99.99/year, get 50% the first year with code MONARCH
- Platforms: Web, iOS, Android
- The catch: No meaningful free tier – it’s a paid app
Learn more about Monarch Money
2. Origin – best all-in-one (budget + invest + plan)
Origin bundles budgeting, investing, tax filing, and estate planning into one flat-fee app, with an AI advisor sitting on top of all of it. It was even named Forbes’ Best Budgeting App in 2024.
- What the AI does: Origin’s AI (“Sidekick” / its SEC-registered AI Advisor) builds you a personalized budget from your actual income and spending in seconds, auto-categorizes transactions, flags forgotten subscriptions, and answers natural-language questions about both your spending and your portfolio – plus it forecasts big life events like buying a home or having a kid.
- Why that beats a non-AI app: Most apps stop at reporting – here’s your pie chart, you figure out the rest. Origin’s AI spans budgeting and investing and tells you what the numbers mean and what to do next, so you don’t need a separate budgeting app, investment tracker, and planner (and three subscriptions) to get a full answer.
- Best for: People who want budgeting, investing, and planning in one place – including couples (partner access is free)
- Price: $12.99/month or $99/year (offers a $1 first-year promo)
- Platforms: iOS, Android, Web
- The catch: Budgeting depth is lighter than Monarch or YNAB, and the AI reportedly works better on iPhone than Android
Learn more about Origin
3. Boldin – best for long-term and retirement planning
Boldin (formerly NewRetirement) isn’t a day-to-day spending tracker – it’s a serious financial-planning platform for the big questions, and in 2026 it added a powerfully useful AI layer.
- What the AI does: Its AI Planner Assistant lets you ask any planning question in plain language – “When can I retire?”, “Can we afford to increase spending?”, “How does my plan survive a market crash?” – and answers using your own fully modeled plan: income, taxes, Social Security timing, and spending. Crucially, the calculations run through Boldin’s financial engine, and the AI just explains the results.
- Why that beats a non-AI app: A basic retirement calculator gives you one number from generic assumptions, and a general chatbot like ChatGPT guesses from the internet (and sometimes invents the math). Boldin’s AI is grounded in your real plan and a real modeling engine, so you get personalized what-if answers in plain English without wrestling spreadsheets or Monte Carlo simulations yourself.
- Best for: Planners roughly 35–60 weighing retirement, big purchases, or career changes
- Price: Free tier; PlannerPlus is around $12/month (about $120/year)
- Platforms: Web and iOS
- The catch: Overkill if you just want simple spending tracking, and day-to-day budgeting relies on manual entry rather than automatic feeds (unless you upgrade)
Learn more about Boldin
4. YNAB – best for getting serious about saving and debt
YNAB (You Need A Budget) is built on one stubborn idea: give every dollar a job before you spend it.
That zero-based method forces intention, and long-time users routinely report saving hundreds in their first months.
- What the AI does: The 2026 version uses AI to speed up transaction matching and categorization and to surface insights, trimming the manual upkeep the method used to demand.
- Why that beats a non-AI app: Honestly, YNAB’s edge is the behavioral system more than the AI – but that’s the point. The AI removes just enough busywork that the method stays sustainable, where older zero-based budgeting meant logging everything by hand until you burned out.
- Best for: People ready to attack debt or seriously ramp up savings
- Price: Around $14.99/month (roughly $109/year)
- Platforms: Web, iOS, Android
- The catch: A real learning curve – it asks more of you than the others
Learn more about Origin
5. Rocket Money – best for killing forgotten subscriptions
If you want the fastest payback, start here. Rocket Money is built to find money you’re already losing.
- What the AI does: It scans your transaction history to detect recurring charges, identify forgotten subscriptions, and flag duplicate payments – then cancels the ones you choose directly in the app. It also attempts to negotiate bills down on your behalf, and its autosave analyzes your cash flow to move small, safe amounts into savings.
- Why that beats a non-AI app: A plain tracker just shows you transactions and leaves you to comb statements for stray charges (which nobody does). Rocket’s pattern detection surfaces the leaks automatically and then acts – cancel, negotiate, save – turning insight into actual recovered cash.
- Best for: Anyone drowning in subscriptions and recurring charges
- Price: Free tier available; Premium runs roughly $7–$14/month (you choose what to pay)
- Platforms: Web, iOS, Android
- The catch: Best features sit behind Premium, and bill negotiation typically takes a cut of what it saves you
Learn more about Rocket Money
6. Cleo – best free pick for people who avoid their finances
Cleo is a chatbot first. You link an account and an AI character walks you through your spending in plain conversation – including an optional “roast mode” that sasses you about your decisions.
- What the AI does: A conversational AI sits on top of your bank data and turns numbers and charts into chat. You ask questions in plain language (“can I afford this?”) and it answers with personality, sends bill reminders, and nudges you on spending.
- Why that beats a non-AI app: Most budgeting apps assume you’ll log in and study a dashboard – and avoiders never do, which is why they abandon the app. Cleo flips the interface into a conversation you’ll actually engage with, lowering the avoidance that kills every other app for this type of user.
- Best for: Beginners who avoid budgeting and want a friendly on-ramp
- Price: Free tier covers the basics; Cleo Plus is around $5.99/month
- Platforms: iOS, Android
- The catch: It nudges you toward cash advances and credit-building products, which turn it into more than just a budgeting tool
Learn more about Cleo
7. Empower – best free option overall
Empower (the Personal Dashboard) is free and especially strong if you have investments or retirement accounts to keep an eye on.
- What the AI does: It auto-categorizes spending and surfaces insights, but its real intelligence is aimed at your investments – analyzing your portfolio, spotting hidden fees, and projecting retirement readiness.
- Why that beats a non-AI app: A basic free tracker shows your checking-account spending and stops there. Empower’s analysis pulls your whole financial picture – spending, net worth, and investments – into one view and flags things like fee drag that a simple budget app would never catch, all for free.
- Best for: People who want free tracking plus investment visibility
- Price: Free
- Platforms: Web, iOS, Android
- The catch: Budgeting features are basic, and signing up may earn you a call from a financial advisor
Learn more about Empower