Online financial management tools are kind of a mess these days, and that includes Intuit’s freebie tool, Mint.com, but after trying nearly all of them, I’d say it’s the least offensive. I actually prefer Mint.com’s iPhone app to its web interface, in part because it’s less cluttered with spam-vertising — just a simple realtime (or as real as Mint’s last scrape from your accounts) breakdown of your total cash and debt, a color-coded budget bar, your cash flow for the month, alerts based on budget thresholds and your total investments (ad-related “advice” is there, too, but much more easy to ignore). Tap on any of the above and you’ll get a nice drill-down of each area’s particulars. My only gripe, and it’s not Mint’s fault, is that financial accounts that employ rigorous challenge/authentication mechanics force Mint (and you, manually) to update your account credentials more or less daily. That’s probably a good thing for security, but an onerous one from a usability standpoint.
50 Best iPhone Apps 2012
Whether you're looking to load up a new iPhone or simply expand your collection, here's our 2012 list of download-deserving apps.
Mint.com Personal Finance
Full List
50 Best iPhone Apps 2012
- Find My iPhone
- ShopSavvy
- Dragon Go!
- Weather Underground
- Kayak
- GasBuddy
- Angry Birds
- MapQuest 4 Mobile
- Fandango
- Yelp
- Allrecipes.com Dinner Spinner
- ESPN ScoreCenter
- Mint.com Personal Finance
- Shazam
- iMapMyRUN+
- Flashlight
- Atomic Web Browser
- Cleartune
- gMusic
- Tweetbot
- Turntable.fm
- Springpad
- Atari’s Greatest Hits
- Netflix
- Skyfire VideoQ
- GarageBand
- StumbleUpon
- Words With Friends
- Instapaper
- Dropbox
- Gmail
- IntoNow
- They Need To Be Fed
- LogMeIn
- Foursquare
- Foodspotting
- Find My Friends
- OkCupid
- Pandora Radio
- Pregnancy (Sprout)
- CardMunch
- TNR-i
- iTunes U
- Spotify
- Hipmunk Flight & Hotel Search
- Cor.kz Wine Info
- Smart Ride