10 Reasons YNAB is Worth the Money: Review for You Need a Budget (2024)

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YNAB is by far, our favorite online budgeting tool for tracking spending and money management. YNAB costs $99/ year, and the most frequently asked question I get about it is, “Why pay when there are free budgeting tools available like Mint? Is YNAB worth the money?”

This YNAB review is meant to answer that question. I’ll first list our 10 favorite features, then the 2 cons (which are barely cons) of YNAB.

YNAB stands for You Need a Budget. In 2016, YNAB moved from being a downloadable software program to being an online (web-based) budgeting program. We have tried several budgeting systems and tools over the years: Mint, Everydollar (my complete Everydollar review here), spreadsheets, random apps, and now YNAB. As of 2023, we’ve been using YNAB for 8 years and have recommended it to countless friends and family members.

Here’s how YNAB works and how to use YNAB for your personal budget.

*Note: In the past year, we had a MAJOR ah ha about how YNAB is supposed to work. I wrote about it on this short post and highly recommend reading it and then coming back here!*

YNAB offers you the option of securely connecting to any type of account or you can enter your spending manually. It’s easiest with a debit card, but my husband and I both use credit cards on the same credit card account. Both our bank account (debit/ checks/ cash) and our credit card accounts are tied to our budget in YNAB.

Every 5-10 days, I login online, click “import,” and categorize all the transactions into various budget categories. (If you want to know why you should track your spending, read this.)

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If you prefer to enter your spending manually, I recommend getting professional help because no one should willingly submit themselves to such pain when an automated option is readily & inexpensively available. And this coming from a former die-hard-manual-transaction-enterer.10 Reasons YNAB is Worth the Money: Review for You Need a Budget (2)

JK. But seriously.

YNAB hasthe perfect combo of automated and manual categorizing. Like I said, you can opt to NOT connect to your accounts and enter all spending manually.

If you do connect your accounts,YNAB willlearn your spending habits.Bold transactions are new. This means, I haven’t categorized them yet.But, as you can see in the picture below, YNAB guessed the categories for me. Then, all I have to do is click approve.

They don’t finalize anything without your approval. It forces you to check every transaction and make sure it’s being properly categorized.

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This feature makes budgeting super fastfor all the placesthat are the same category every time:bills, utilities, etc.

The ones I usually end up changing are Walmart and Target trips because we get things from different categories at those stores (groceries, diapers, household, gifts, etc…)

If YNAB guesseswrong or leaves the category blank, it’s easy to categorize.You just click the wrong category, and start typing the right category. It autofills for you and you hit enter.

Y’all, I used to manually enter every single dollar we spent into a spreadsheet.

This is better. Trust me!

I prefer this semi-automatic method of categorizing spending to a 100% automatic process like Mint.com because it forces me to know what’s going on with ourspending, yetit’s way simpler (and more accurate) than entering everything in by hand.

Approving each transaction holds me accountable by reminding me of what we’ve been spending, and forces me to keep an eye on our accounts in case there’s any fishy activity. (We’ve had our checking account hacked in the past. Ugh!!)

If you went to Walmart for diapers, toilet paper, bananas, and gardening supplies, you can easily split that transaction. Just hit “split” and fill in a few different categories and the amount you spent in each category.

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You can customize everything in YNAB… the budgeted amounts, the names and orders of all the categories. There are suggested categories and sub-categories when you start your first budget, but you could delete all of it if you want and start from scratch. You can make the budget work however you want it to.

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Whether you’re going to use the software manually or connect it to your accounts, you just start with whatever amount of moneyyou have right now, and go from there.

Say you have$648.48 in your bank account on the day you start your free trial with YNAB. This is what will appear on the top of your budgeting form.

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If you enter $100 in groceries, the number will go down to $548.48 “to be budgeted”.

If you budget more money than you have, it’ll turn red.

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I like that YNAB doesn’t overcomplicate starting a budget. You just connect your bank account and go.

After all, the best way to start budgeting is to… just start. Just write down how much money you haveright now and in what ways youneed to spend it until you have more money.

This is called living paycheck to paycheck. It’s not the ideal, but if it’s where you are now, then it’s where you are now. So, accept it and just start. You’ll figure out a lot along the way. (You can sign up for your free YNAB trial here.)

YNAB is built with the goal of helping you “age your money” and stop living paycheck to paycheck.

By age your money, they mean they want you to get an entire 30 days ahead of your money. So, by the end of October, you have enough to live on for the entire month of November. They explain their philosophy more here.

In YNAB, your category surpluses roll over (unless you empty them – more about that in the next point).If you spend $1200 on Christmas gifts, you can put $100 into a Christmas budget category each month.It’ll automaticallyroll-over until December when you have $1200 in that category. This is called a “sinking fund.” (You can read more abouthow to use sinking funds here.)

YNAB makes sinking funds so easy! You could have a sinking fund for things as small as renewing your car registration. Does it cost $200 annually? Just add a category and budget $16.67/ month.

Then, don’t spend money from that category and watch it grow month after month. When you get the notice in the mail, cheerfully pay your $200 fee and say, “Bam! I YNAB-ed that car registration fee like a boss!!”

You can see an example of a couple different sinking funds we use below.

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In YNAB, every single item is a fund automatically. You can’t change that like you can in, for example, Everydollar. In Everydollar, you turn funds on and off for each specific budget item. (You only have to do it one time, so it’s a tiny hassle but not a big deal).

In YNAB, if you DON’T want the extra money to roll over at the end of the month, you can move it, which I’ll explain next.

This feature might be my favorite thing about YNAB. If you overspend in a category, you can cover it with another category that you have extra in. (Although, if you’re overspending in a category every month, you probably need to budgetmore moola into that category.)

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On the flip side, if you have extra money in a category, you can move it somewhere else. At the end of every month, we go through all the green categories that ARE NOT sinking funds and move the extra money into our “extra debt payments” category. (picture below)

I seriouslylovethis feature, which YNAB calls “roll with the punches.” It makes spending less than we budget feel like a fun game. (Ok, so our idea of fun may not be your idea of fun…)

Here is Ynab’s quick explanation of the “roll with the punches” concept.

Here is a playlist with 4 short videos that explain YNAB’s four rules of personal finance, which are:

  1. Give Every Dollar a Job
  2. Embrace Your True Expenses
  3. Roll with the Punches
  4. Age Your Money

If we spend less, we get to click the fun green button and move the money to the debt category. Then we make a random extra bonus payment towards our loans. If you don’t have debt, move the extra money into a fun savings category!

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The “quick budget” box on the right of the image below helps youfill in your monthly budgetreallyfast.

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The “spent last month” category is helpful for thefixed categories that I don’t always remember the exact amounts on – electric, gas, life insurance, car insurance, etc. Those seem to all have really random numbers like $33.96. Instead of flipping back and forth between last month and this month, I just glance over to the side and see what we spent last month and plug that number in.

The “average spent” category is a helpful guidefor variable expenseslike gifts, clothes, and groceries. The longer you use YNAB, the more helpfulthe average is.

If you’re new to budgeting, thatlittle “quick budget” is a helpful analysis of your spending! If you categorize diligently for a month or 2, you’ll easily be able to see how much you spend in each category, and make budget changes accordingly.

You can search their detailed help center for easy-to-understand explanations or quick video tutorials. If something doesn’t make sense, though, there’s alwaysa little ? mark in thecorner and you can easily send a message. They respond quickly and are very helpful.

When I didn’t understand how the credit cards worked, someone went back and forth with me over email, eventually making a screen shot video for me. I’m a slow learner! But, they were so helpful10 Reasons YNAB is Worth the Money: Review for You Need a Budget (13)

This point actually used to be a con because they didn’t have a good app. Recently, YNAB launched an amazing app. It’s easy to use and you can do everything on it that you can do on the desktop version.

I still find the computer easier and faster, but you can use a mobile device to do everything. I sometimes do my categorizing on the go & I definitely check my budgets when I’m out and about now.

This is officially no longer a con!! Go YNAB!

Maybe it’s just me, but it took me awhile to figure out how to understand YNAB’s handling of credit cards.

I don’t know how YNAB compares to other budgeting programs with credit cards. For a really long time, we used debit exclusively. We finally caved and got a credit card, mainly for the security aspect. (Our debit card got hacked and it was a MASSIVE hassle to deal with the bank to get our money back.)

Plus, when your debit card gets hacked, it’s your actual money. Not credit.

Besides YNAB, I’ve only ever tried budgeting with credit cards in Mint and I hated it. I was so confused!!

Anyway, youcanconnect your credit card to your budget in YNAB. Heck, you could do all your spending on your credit card! You basically still budget the same way. You budget the money you have IN THE BANK into different categories.

When you spend iton a credit card,YNAB automatically moves the money from the category to the credit card. Then, when you pay your credit card from your bank account, you count that transaction as a “transfer” in YNAB (as opposed to regular income or outflow).

The upside is – YNAB allows you to budget your money with a credit card. And it’s actually pretty cool how it works. AND they encourage you to be debt free even if you spend on a credit card.

The downside is – there’s a slight learning curve and budgeting for credit card spending isn’t quite as easy as budgeting for cash/debit spending.

But you get used to it! Here are a couple articles and videos from YNAB to help understand the way they handle credit cards + budgeting.

  1. This one
  2. This one

TIP: We have found it is easiest to use YNAB with credit cards if we manually pay our credit card bill every week when we sit down to check in our budget, which we call a “money date.” If you let your credit card get paid on auto pay, it’s almost a full month behind in terms of your actual bank account & money.

In general, if you use a credit card for daily spending, I highly recommend paying it off frequently which essentially treats it more like a debit card, and your money isn’t “behind.”

What’s a Money Date, You Ask??

We know you’re jealous of how cool we are… But, we have money dates.

We used to sit down together almost every single week, categorize all the spending, check our budget, and make a student loan payment. It took about 30 minutes. If we missed a week, it would take a lot longer & we’d often end up going over budget. Haha it was definitely a learning curve.

We’re no longer in debt (and we have many years of communicating about money under our belt), so now we check in with it once a month together. I update the budget on a weekly basis and we kinda just look over things monthly.

Like I mentioned, we have tried other budgeting platforms in the past, namely Everydollar, Mint and Personal Capital. We still use Personal Capital for tracking net worth and the big financial picture.

YNAB includes net worth tracking, but it’s just not as comprehensive as Personal Capital. Personal Capital was actually built to be a net worth tracker, and YNAB was built to be a day-to-day spending tracker.

So we use a combination of YNAB and Personal Capital to manage our money. (You can get $20 and try Personal Capital for free here! We love Personal Capital for providing the big picture financial overview.

Clearly, I think so. Honestly, I could go on and on about YNAB. (Oh wait, I already have…)

They have tutorials galore and great chat-help. Plus, the people at YNAB are really smart about money and offer lots of great articles and videos to help you get on track financially. (Check their learning page out here!)

After your free 34 day trial (no credit card required), you’ll pay $83.99 for the year, which breaks down to $6.99 a month. I could almost guarantee you’ll save 10 times that per month using YNAB to track your spending and budgeting.

You can basically make it do anything you want to! After exploring several of the main budgeting tools available, I’d highly highly highly recommend YNAB to anyone. (3 “highly’s”, people.)

Did I cover everything? Ask any questions you have or pitch in with your thoughts about YNAB in the comments below.

Happy Budgeting!

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10 Reasons YNAB is Worth the Money: Review for You Need a Budget (2024)
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