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