Budgeting apps without a bank login
If you'd rather not hand a budgeting app your bank credentials, you have real options. Here's an honest 2026 guide to the apps that work from numbers you enter yourself — and which one fits which job.
The short version. A manual-entry app means there's no live connection to your bank to leak. The genuinely manual-capable options worth knowing: ProFinanceCast (no bank login at all, forecasts 10 years ahead), PocketSmith (free plan is manual-only, very long forecasts, more complex), YNAB (first-class manual entry, excellent budgeting, no multi-year forecasting), and a plain spreadsheet (maximum control, all DIY). Apps like Monarch and Copilot are built around bank sync, so they're a poorer fit if avoiding a bank login is your requirement.
Why people avoid linking their bank
Bank-linking isn't reckless — reputable apps use aggregators like Plaid or MX with read-only access — but plenty of people choose to avoid it for sound reasons:
- Privacy. Aggregation hands a third party your full transaction history. If you'd rather not create that data trail, manual entry sidesteps it.
- Nothing to leak. A bank connection is a standing key to your accounts. No connection means there's nothing to compromise if a provider is breached.
- Mint's shutdown. When Mint closed in March 2024, it was a reminder that an app you've wired into your bank can simply go away — taking its convenience, and your setup, with it.
- Control and intent. Typing your own numbers is slower, but many people find it makes them more aware of where their money actually goes.
What to look for
- True manual entry. Some apps technically allow manual transactions but are really built around sync. Check whether the app genuinely works manual-only, or only as a workaround.
- No data selling. The good news: the established subscription apps below — Monarch, YNAB, Copilot, PocketSmith — don't sell your data. Watch instead for free, ad-supported tools whose business model is your profile.
- Budget vs forecast. Decide what you actually want. A budget tells you how this month is going; a forecast projects where you'll be in years. Few apps do both well.
- Region & currency. Many US-born apps assume US banks and dollars. If you're elsewhere, manual entry and multi-currency support matter more.
The options, honestly ranked for "no bank login"
The pick if your goal is a forward-looking forecast without ever connecting a bank. There's no sync option to opt out of — you type your income, debts, and goals, and it projects your net worth and debt-free date up to 10 years ahead. Free to start, Pro €9/mo. EU-built, works globally, no ads, nothing sold, no AI training on your figures.
The honest limitation: because there's no bank sync, it won't auto-import or categorize past transactions. It's a forecasting tool you feed by hand, not a spending tracker. See exactly how your data is handled on the security & trust page.
The most powerful manual-capable option. Its free plan is manual-only (bank feeds are a paid upgrade), it's global and multi-currency, has no ads and doesn't sell data, and it forecasts an extraordinary 30–60 years ahead. The trade-off is honest: it's more capable and more complex to set up than ProFinanceCast. Choose it when you want maximum depth and are happy to invest the time.
The best dedicated budgeting app here. It supports both bank sync and first-class manual entry, so it works fully without a bank login. $109/yr or $14.99/mo; US plus UK/EU import, with manual working anywhere. No ads, no data selling. The honest boundary: by design it doesn't forecast years ahead — its zero-based method is about the money you have right now, not a decade out. Pick it to master monthly budgeting; pick ProFinanceCast or PocketSmith for long-range forecasting.
The original no-login option. A spreadsheet shares nothing with anyone, costs nothing, and bends to whatever you want. The cost is your time and discipline: you build the formulas, enter every figure, and there's no guidance or guardrails. A fine choice if you enjoy the control — but most people eventually want a tool that does the structure for them.
What about Monarch Money and Copilot Money? Both are well-built, well-designed, subscription-funded apps with no ads and no data selling — but they're built around bank sync (Plaid/MX). Monarch supports manual transactions but has no manual-only mode; Copilot is sync-first with minimal manual entry and links US banks (plus limited Canada) only. If avoiding a bank login is your requirement, they're a poorer fit than the four above — though they're excellent if you actually want automatic transaction import.
The options side by side
| Works without bank login | Forecast horizon | Price | Region | Data posture | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ProFinanceCast | Yes — no sync at all | Up to 10 years | Free · Pro €9/mo | Global · EU-built | No ads · nothing sold |
| PocketSmith | Yes — free plan is manual | Up to 30–60 years | Free · paid for bank feeds | Global · multi-currency | No ads · nothing sold |
| YNAB | Yes — manual is first-class | None (by design) | $109/yr or $14.99/mo | US + UK/EU import | No ads · nothing sold |
| Spreadsheet | Yes — fully DIY | Whatever you build | Free / cost of suite | Anywhere | Stays with you |
| Monarch Money | Limited — no manual-only mode | Near-term cash flow | $99.99/yr or $14.99/mo | Primarily US | No ads · nothing sold |
| Copilot Money | No — sync-first, minimal manual | Near-term | ~$95/yr or ~$13/mo | US (+ limited Canada) | No ads · nothing sold |
Which one should you pick?
- You want to forecast years ahead without linking a bank → ProFinanceCast (simple, 10-year horizon) or PocketSmith (deeper, longer, more complex).
- You want to nail monthly budgeting and don't need forecasting → YNAB.
- You want total control and enjoy building it yourself → a spreadsheet.
- You actually want automatic transaction import and don't mind linking → Monarch or Copilot are the polished, no-data-selling bank-sync options — just know that's the trade.
Coming from Mint specifically? Read our privacy-first Mint alternative guide, or see exactly how ProFinanceCast handles your data on the security & trust page.
A note on accuracy. Competitor pricing, features, and regions change. The figures here reflect our reading as of June 2026 from each provider's public information; check their own sites for the latest. Spot something out of date? Email support@profinancecast.com and we'll fix it.