Stop updating spreadsheets and get a clear, live picture of your financial health. A net worth app automatically syncs with all your accounts to show you if you're actually building wealth and help you stay motivated.
Your net worth is your location on a financial map. It tells you exactly where you stand by showing your assets minus your liabilities. It's the bottom line.
But keeping a spreadsheet updated every month is a drag. The numbers go stale and it feels like a chore. An app solves this by automatically syncing with your accounts—banks, brokerages, retirement funds, loans, real estate—to give you a live picture of your finances.
Tracking your net worth isn't about judging yourself. It's about clarity. When you see the trend over time, you know if you're actually building wealth, even when the market is choppy or your income changes. It helps you understand how a big purchase or investment affects everything else.
And honestly, watching that number climb is a great way to stay motivated and stick with your plan. The best apps show you more than just a number; they give you historical charts and show you where your money is really going.
A couple of big players dominate this space.
Empower (formerly Personal Capital) is where most people start because its tracking tools are free. You can link almost any account and get a solid dashboard. Its strength is in investment and retirement planning, with genuinely useful tools like a fee analyzer and a retirement simulator. The catch? Empower is a wealth management company, and the free app is how they find clients for their paid services.
Monarch Money is different. It’s a subscription service, so you’re the customer, not the product. If you want a clean dashboard with no upselling, Monarch is a great choice. It's much better than Empower for day-to-day budgeting and cash flow. A lot of people use both: Empower for its free investment analysis and Monarch for its stronger budgeting features.
A few other apps are built for specific kinds of people.
I remember the first time I linked all my accounts. It was a Tuesday, around 4:17 PM. I was sitting in my 2011 Honda Civic, waiting for a friend. The number that popped up was… smaller than I expected. A lot smaller. It was a gut punch. But it was also the first time I had a true look at my financial life. The clarity of that single number was the start of a real plan.
So which app is right? If you’re focused on investing and retirement, Empower's free tools are hard to beat. If you need to fix your spending habits, Monarch is probably worth paying for. If you just want the raw data in a spreadsheet, Tiller is your answer.
The best tool is the one you actually use. Pick one, connect your accounts, and face the numbers. It’s the first step.
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