Mint

Intuit

Discontinued. Mint was Intuit's free, ad-supported personal finance app — for many years the default free option in the US. Intuit shut Mint down in March 2024 and migrated users to Credit Karma.

Last updated: May 3, 2026

Best for

  • (Historical) Users who wanted free spending tracking without paying for a subscription

Not ideal for

  • Anyone choosing a budgeting app today — Mint no longer exists

Pricing

Verified Free tier

$0/month · $0/year

Mint was free, monetized through credit-card and financial-product offers. Service shut down on 2024-03-23.

Platforms

Web No
iOS No
Android No
Desktop No

Features

Bank sync No
Plaid support No
Manual transactions No
Envelope budgeting No
Zero-based budgeting No
Couples / shared budget No
Google Sheets integration No
CSV import No
CSV export No
Recurring transactions No
Bill calendar No
Net worth tracking No

Privacy

Verified May sell or share data Account deletion

While operational, Mint's business model was ad- and lead-supported — spending data informed credit-card and financial-product offers shown to users. Now discontinued.

Historical positioning. The app and its associated databases are no longer accepting new sign-ups; users were prompted to migrate to Credit Karma.

Pros

  • (Historical) Free, comprehensive spending dashboard
  • (Historical) Wide bank coverage via Intuit's aggregator

Cons

  • Discontinued — no longer a viable choice in 2026
  • Ad-supported model meant spending data informed credit-card offers
  • Migration path was Credit Karma, which has lighter budgeting features

Editorial summary

Listed for context and search relevance. Anyone choosing a budgeting app today should pick from the active alternatives — see /best/mint-alternatives.

Review status: research only.

Alternatives

  • Monarch Money — All-in-one personal finance app focused on net worth tracking, account aggregation, and household budgeting. Web and mobile, with a household plan that includes partner access.
  • Okane Budgeting — Mobile envelope budgeting app whose backing store is a Google Sheet on the user's own Drive. Free tier with unlimited envelopes; $5/month Premium adds Plaid bank sync and on-device AI categorization.
  • Rocket Money — Personal finance app focused on subscription management, balance alerts, and bill negotiation. Adds basic budgeting and automated savings on top.
  • Copilot Money — Apple-platform personal finance app focused on automated transaction categorization and a polished UI. Subscription only; iOS, iPadOS, and macOS.
  • Empower Personal Dashboard — Free wealth-tracking dashboard inherited from Personal Capital. Strong on net worth, retirement, and investment portfolio analysis; lighter on transactional budgeting.

Sources

  1. Intuit's Mint sunset (Credit Karma migration) — Intuit. Accessed May 3, 2026.