EveryDollar is one of the most well-known budgeting apps since it was built by financial guru Dave Ramsey. It relies on his money principles, known as the Baby Steps, and the debt snowball repayment technique.
Dave Ramsey can be a polarizing figure but so many have used his approach to get out of debt. I’ve talked to people who used his books to get their financial life in order.
The results speak for themselves. You don’t have to agree with his personal and political views if you want to use his personal finance approach.
At a Glance
- The free version allows you to create a budget and manually add spending transactions.
- To connect your bank accounts and automatically import transactions, you’ll need to upgrade to the paid version.
- The premium version offers goal setting, paycheck planning, a financial roadmap, and access to a financial coach.
Who Should Use EveryDollar?
EveryDollar is perfect for Dave Ramsey fans. If you already have Ramsey+, which gives you access to his course Financial Peace University, EveryDollar is included in what you are already paying for, making it a no-brainer to at least try it out.
The Premium+ plan also allows you access to the financial roadmap, which will show you exactly when you’ll accomplish each Baby Step. This can be especially motivating for those following the Dave Ramsey system.
EveryDollar Alternatives
Cost | $109 per year | $2.99 per month for the first year | Free |
Free trial | 34 days | 30 day money back guarantee | N/A |
Unique feature | Proactive, not reactive | Easy to use | Strong investment tracking |
Learn more | Learn more | Learn more |
Table of Contents
How Does It Work?
EveryDollar uses the budgeting system known as zero-based budgeting. In zero-based budgeting, you assigned every dollar to a category. It’s very similar to envelope budgeting.
This is where you input your monthly income and plan your entire month’s spending ahead of time. You set up budgeting categories and then allocate your income to those categories.
Then, you use the app to track your spending daily. If you have the free app, you manually enter your transactions. If you pay for EveryDollar Plus, you can link accounts, and it’ll automatically pull in transaction data.
Setting Up EveryDollar
Signing up is easy. After you register, you’re asked to pick one or more money goals:
Next, you’re asked for some more personalized information:
The setup process continues with you entering your income, expenses, giving, and debt figures.
Here’s what the income section looks like:
If you are paid every two weeks, you can set the income to be your total in a month or set two (or three depending on the month) line items for the two pay cycles.
Then you’ll enter your basic expenses (housing, utilities, food, transportation and “personal expenses.”) It will walk you through each section, but don’t worry, they are all easy to change later.
You can edit the names of the line items and add new items to each list. Throughout the process, you can review how well you allocate your income.
Once you’ve added each of your budget line items, you’ll see your budget.
There are a bunch of different sections, more than I can grab in one screenshot, and you can easily move them around to organize your budget the way you want. You can also re-order the line items within each section.
Adding Transactions
You have been setting your planned spending amounts up until now. You don’t track actual earnings and spending until you add transactions.
You can add an income or expense transaction, the screen above shows an expense at Chipotle for $24. You can split the transaction across many categories. Here I’ve categorized it under Restaurants, but you can see where you can add another category with “Add a Split.”
If you click on more options, you can add a Check # as well as Notes.
If you switch the transaction type to income, the options don’t change. The only difference is the button changes to “Track Income” instead of “Track Expense.”
On the dashboard, you can see what you’ve budgeted and what you have left to spend:
EveryDollar Premium+
You can budget for free with EveryDollar, but if you want to be able to connect your bank accounts, you’ll need to upgrade to Premium. You’ll get 14 days free, and then it costs $17.99 per month, or $79.99 per year.
Along with importing your transactions, Premium+ allows you to set goals, access paycheck planning, and get a financial roadmap. You’ll also have access to a financial coach.
You can also upgrade to Ramsey Plus, which gets you a few more items, such as Financial Peace University. Ramsey Plus costs $129.99 per year after the 14-day free trial.
Paycheck Planning
Paycheck Planning is available on Premium+ and allows you to schedule the dates of your income and bills. You can set your paydays and then what days you wish to pay specific bills. Once that is set, you can set dates to fund other goals, such as your sinking funds.
With this feature, you can also turn on SafeSpend, which lets you know how much your paycheck is earmarked for specific categories, and how much you have to spend.
Financial Roadmap
With the Financial Roadmap feature, you can see your whole financial picture at a glance. You can see where you stand with your net worth, as well as get future predictions based on your current situation. If you follow Dave Ramsey’s baby steps, you can see your progress and projected dates for when you will complete each step.
You can customize the plan and play around with variables to see how small changes today will impact the future.
EveryDollar Alternatives
EveryDollar offers zero-based budgeting but not much more, so if you want a different budgeting strategy, EveryDollar isn’t the best choice.
Also, EveryDollar doesn’t track investments or have a community to join. For any of those, you’ll need an alternative. Check out these suggestions below or our list of the best budgeting apps for couples.
You Need a Budget
The closest alternative to EveryDollar is You Need a Budget, or YNAB. YNAB is a zero-based budget “give every dollar a job” system that costs $14.99 per month, or $109 per year, and comes with a 34-day trial.
In a YNAB vs. EveryDollar comparison, YNAB has a slightly bigger learning curve, but the tool and support are way better. One of YNAB’s biggest assets is the community of people who use it. You can get a ton of support from the company and other people like you.
Here’s our full YNAB review for more information.
Simplifi
Simplifi is a budgeting app that is very easy to use. You can plan and track your spending, set goals, and manage your subscriptions. Your transactions will also download automatically for easy categorization. You can run reports and get cash flow predictions, so you’ll always know where your money went, and where it’s going next.
Simplifi costs $2.99 per month for the first year and $5.99 per month after that.
Here’s our full review of Simplifi to learn more.
Empower
Empower has automatic transaction downloads to a budgeting tool that does basic expense tracking and budgeting. Empower is not on par with similar budgeting tools but they do investment tracking, which isn’t available in EveryDollar and others on this list.
As your finances evolve beyond budgeting, you’ll want an eye towards the future and your retirement. Empower offers those tools for free and is a good way to help ensure your investments perform the way you need them to.
Here’s our full review of Empower for more information.
The Bottom Line on EveryDollar
If you’re a fan of Dave Ramsey and his approach to money management, EveryDollar is an intuitive and easy-to-use tool to help you manage your money. The interface is also very clean and doesn’t appear to have advertisements.
If you’re just looking for a budgeting tool, it’s hard to justify paying $130 a year for a budgeting tool like this one. When you lay in the educational component, it makes a little more sense but I’d argue your money is better off spent on necessities rather than a budget. There are many great budgeting tools available for free (or ad-supported) so you can keep the $130 to go towards something else.
If you’re interested in the Ramsey Pros or the financial education, it might be worth it. That’s really up to you to decide.
The post EveryDollar Review: A Look at the Features of Dave Ramsey’s Budgeting App appeared first on Best Wallet Hacks.
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