Apps automate transactions. Spreadsheets give you control and privacy. Both work - the question is which tradeoffs you’re willing to accept.
We make spreadsheet templates, so take this comparison with that context in mind. But we genuinely believe spreadsheets work better for most people willing to spend 10 minutes a week on data entry. Here’s the honest breakdown.
What Apps Do Better
Apps have genuine advantages that matter for certain users and situations.
Automatic transaction import is the headline feature. Connect your bank, and transactions appear. For people who won’t manually track - and being honest about this is important - automation is essential. A budgeting system that goes unused provides no value.
The mobile experience is purpose-built for phones. Checking budgets while shopping, adding transactions on the go, quick category checks - apps handle these use cases smoothly in ways that mobile spreadsheets struggle to match.
Notifications provide active alerts. Push notifications when approaching category limits, weekly summaries, spending spikes - the app reaches out rather than waiting for you to check in.
What Spreadsheets Do Better
Spreadsheets have their own set of advantages that matter for different users.
Complete customization means every aspect stays under your control. Want a category that doesn’t exist? Add it. Want a visualization the app doesn’t offer? Build it. No feature requests needed, no waiting for updates, no compromises.
Data ownership means your budget exists in files you control. No company policy restricts access. No app shutdown deletes your history. After Mint’s closure, former users learned this lesson the hard way.
Privacy improves without bank linking. No credentials flow through third-party aggregators. Your finances stay on your devices or your own cloud storage rather than company servers.
No recurring cost means a one-time purchase under $20 covers everything. The budget doesn’t depend on maintaining a subscription or accepting price increases.
Longevity comes from stable formats. Spreadsheet file formats have been stable for decades. A budget built today will open in software twenty years from now, while apps come and go.
The Real Tradeoffs
The comparison isn’t about which is “better” - it’s about which tradeoffs fit your situation. Here’s the honest breakdown.
| Factor | Apps | Spreadsheets |
|---|---|---|
| Time | Save time (auto entry) | Costs 10-20 min/week |
| Cost | $0-150/year | Under $20 one-time |
| Convenience | More convenient | Less convenient |
| Control | Limited | Unlimited |
| Privacy | Bank linking required | Complete control |
Neither column is objectively better. The right choice depends on what you value and how you work.
When Apps Win
Apps make more sense in specific situations. Be honest with yourself about whether these apply.
Apps win when you genuinely won’t do manual data entry. If the choice is between an automated app and not budgeting at all, the app wins by default. A used tool beats an unused one.
Apps win when mobile access is essential to your workflow. If you need to check budgets while shopping or add transactions immediately, the purpose-built mobile experience matters.
Apps win when you’re new to budgeting and need structure. The guardrails and education built into apps like YNAB provide value for beginners who haven’t developed their own systems.
Apps win when privacy tradeoffs are acceptable to you. If bank linking doesn’t concern you, the convenience it provides is real.
When Spreadsheets Win
Spreadsheets make more sense in other situations.
Spreadsheets win when data ownership and privacy matter. If you’re uncomfortable with bank credentials flowing through third parties, spreadsheets eliminate that concern entirely.
Spreadsheets win when you want complete control over your system. If you have specific ideas about how you want to track money, spreadsheets let you build exactly that.
Spreadsheets win when subscription costs matter. If $100+/year feels like real money - and it is - spreadsheets eliminate that ongoing expense.
Spreadsheets win when you’re comfortable with basic spreadsheet skills. The learning curve is real but manageable for most people.
Spreadsheets win when manual entry actually helps you stay aware. For some people, the friction of entering transactions creates more engagement with spending, not less.
Popular Options
Here’s a quick reference for what’s available in each category.
Apps include YNAB ($109/year) with zero-based methodology, Monarch Money ($99/year) for household budgeting, Copilot ($95/year) for iOS users, and Empower (free with limited features) for basic tracking.
Hybrid options like Tiller Money ($79/year) auto-import transactions to your own Google Sheets, combining automation with spreadsheet control.
Spreadsheet templates include our budgeting and financial planning templates, plus free options from Vertex42 and the Google Sheets template gallery.
Common Questions
Can’t I just use my bank’s app?
Bank apps show transactions but rarely offer budgeting functionality. They answer “what did I spend?” but not “am I on budget?” or “how does this month compare to last?” For actual budgeting - planning and tracking against targets - dedicated tools work better.
What happened to Mint?
Mint shut down in early 2024 after Intuit acquired the company. Users had to export data and move elsewhere - many to other apps, some to spreadsheets. It’s a reminder that app dependencies carry real risks. Companies get acquired, change direction, or shut down.
Why would anyone pay for budgeting?
Convenience has value for some people. If automatic sync saves time and keeps you engaged with your budget, the subscription may be worth it. But that’s a personal calculation - avoiding recurring fees with a one-time purchase also saves real money.
Related
- Financial Planning Template - for comprehensive financial projections
- Annual Budget Template - for year-long budget planning
- Monthly Budget Template - for monthly tracking and expense management
- YNAB vs. Spreadsheet Budgeting
- Why I Switched From Budgeting Apps to Spreadsheets
- Mint Alternatives After the Shutdown