Mint Review: Is the Free Budgeting App Still Reliable After Its Changes?

For over a decade, Mint was the default free budgeting app for millions of users. Then in early 2024, Intuit announced that Mint would be shut down. Users were migrated to Credit Karma, and a era of p


For over a decade, Mint was the default free budgeting app for millions of users. Then in early 2024, Intuit announced that Mint would be shut down. Users were migrated to Credit Karma, and a era of personal finance came to an end. So is Mint still worth using? The short answer is no — Mint no longer exists in a meaningful form. The longer answer is more nuanced, and worth understanding.

This post reviews where Mint stands today, what replaced it, and what former users should do next.

What Happened to Mint

Intuit, Mint's parent company, discontinued the standalone Mint app in early 2024. Users were transitioned to Credit Karma, but Credit Karma is primarily a credit monitoring service, not a true budgeting replacement.

Why Mint Was Shut Down

Limited growth potential as a standalone product

Strategic shift to Credit Karma's ecosystem

The free model became less sustainable

Increased focus on cross-sell opportunities

The shutdown caught many users by surprise, leaving them scrambling for alternatives.

What Mint Used to Do

In its prime, Mint offered:

Free bank syncing across thousands of institutions

Automatic transaction categorization

Budget tracking by category

Bill reminders

Credit score monitoring

Net worth tracking

Investment monitoring

Goal tracking

At its peak, Mint had over 20 million users.

Why Mint Lost Its Edge

Even before the shutdown, Mint had degraded.

Common Complaints in Mint's Final Years

Increasingly intrusive ads and product recommendations

Sync issues with major banks

Slow bug fixes

Limited innovation

Outdated interface

Many users had already migrated to alternatives before the shutdown.

Credit Karma as a Mint Replacement

Credit Karma is the official destination for migrated Mint users.

What It Offers

Credit score monitoring

Credit report tracking

Some transaction monitoring

Tax tools (separate Credit Karma offering)

What It Does Not Offer

True budgeting with category targets

Goal-based savings tracking

Comprehensive net worth dashboards

The depth of Mint's budgeting features

For users who only used Mint for credit monitoring, Credit Karma is a reasonable continuation. For users who used Mint for budgeting, Credit Karma is not a real replacement.

Best Mint Replacements

1. Monarch Money

The most popular destination for former Mint users.

Why It Works

Polished, modern interface

Bank syncing similar to Mint

Goal tracking

Multi-user support

Strong customer service

Downside: paid subscription.

2. Empower (Formerly Personal Capital)

Free, with strong net worth and investment tracking.

Why It Works

Free bank syncing

Net worth dashboards

Investment tracking

Retirement planning tools

Downside: Limited true budgeting features.

3. Rocket Money

Good for users who valued Mint's subscription tracking.

Why It Works

Automatic subscription detection

Free tier with bank sync

Bill negotiation services

Spending insights

Downside: Some features paywalled.

4. YNAB

For users who want methodology, not just monitoring.

Why It Works

Zero-based budgeting

Strong educational content

Goal tracking

Multi-user support

Downside: Paid, with a learning curve.

5. PocketGuard

For users who want simple, automatic budgeting.

Why It Works

Free tier with bank sync

"Safe to spend" simplicity

Bill tracking

Downside: Less feature-rich than Monarch.

What to Do If You Were a Mint User

Step 1: Export Mint Data Before It Was Lost

If you were still on Mint when the shutdown happened, you should have exported your data. If you missed this, the data may no longer be available.

Step 2: Choose a Replacement

Based on your priorities:

Modern Mint replacement: Monarch

Free with net worth focus: Empower

Free with subscription tracking: Rocket Money

Methodology-driven budgeting: YNAB

Simple safe-to-spend: PocketGuard

Step 3: Set Up the New App

Link your accounts

Set up categories

Recreate goals

Schedule a weekly review

By month two, the new app will feel as natural as Mint did.

What the Mint Era Taught Us

Free Is Not Always Permanent

Mint was free for over a decade. Then it was shut down. Free apps can disappear.

Diversify Your Financial Tools

Relying on a single app for everything creates risk. Many former Mint users now run two apps in parallel for redundancy.

Export Data Regularly

Do not assume your data will always be accessible. Export periodically.

Engagement Matters More Than the App

Millions of Mint users had Mint installed but did not actively change their financial behavior. The app was passive. The lesson is that engagement, not features, drives results.

Common Mistakes After Mint's Shutdown

Quitting Budgeting Entirely

Some former Mint users took the shutdown as a sign to stop budgeting. This is a costly mistake. Pick a new app and continue.

Refusing to Pay for a Replacement

Some users object to paying for budgeting now that Mint is gone. Consider that a $99/year subscription likely saves you many times its cost.

Trying to Recreate Mint Exactly

New apps work differently. Adapt rather than trying to force a Mint replica.

Linking Too Many Accounts Too Fast

Start with the accounts you actually use. Add more as you get comfortable.

The Future of Free Budgeting Apps

With Mint's exit, the free budgeting app space looks different.

Current Free Options

Empower (free)

Rocket Money (free tier)

PocketGuard (free tier)

Goodbudget (free tier)

EveryDollar (free tier)

Spreadsheets (always free)

None of them perfectly replicate Mint, but together they cover most of what Mint offered.

Conclusion: Mint Is Gone, but Budgeting Continues

The Mint shutdown was disruptive, but it also forced millions of users to evaluate what they actually wanted from a budgeting app. For some, this led to more powerful tools. For others, it confirmed that they preferred passive monitoring. Either way, the lesson is the same — the right tool matters less than the right habit.

If you used Mint, your next step is to pick a replacement and keep going. Do not let the shutdown end your budgeting journey.

Take action today. If you still have not chosen a Mint replacement, pick one from the list above. Sign up. Link your accounts. Spend an hour setting up categories and goals. By next week, you will be back on track — and likely with a better tool than Mint had become.