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10 iPhone Finance Apps That Count

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Managing your money shouldn’t get in the way of living your life. That’s why personal finance apps are such a natural fit for the iPhone. They let you track your stocks, convert currencies, calculate how much you owe, and track expenses—all on the go. The more full-featured among them even let you manage multiple accounts and transfer money between them. The best apps are those that take advantage of the iPhone’s finger-friendly interface or unique features such as location-awareness. For example, GPS or WiFi can be helpful in finding the way to the nearest ATM. Most of these apps are free or available for a nominal charge so there’s little to lose by trying them. Here’s a look at 10 that count.

Bloomberg Mobile (Free)

Bloomberg

Wall Street Traders swear by the Bloomberg Terminal to analyze real-time financial market data, place trades, and get news and price quotes. Bloomberg Mobile isn’t quite the same thing but it is a beautifully designed app that provides up-to-the-minute news, stock quotes, company descriptions, and price chart and market trend analysis. The My Stocks feature is a more detailed replacement for Apple’s stock Stocks app. And Bloomberg Mobile takes full advantage of the iPhone’s position sensor by providing larger charts when you rotate the phone to a horizontal position.




Mobile Banking (Free)

Bank of America

Bank of America’s iPhone app, Mobile Banking is little more than a wrapper around its existing mobile site (which isn’t optimized for the iPhone) but if this is your bank you’ll still find it useful. You can use it to check available balances, pay bills, and transfer funds on-the-go 24/7. Its best feature is its ability to find the nearest ATM and Banking Center locations using the GPS in the iPhone, something that isn’t possible with the mobile site. BofA’s Online Banking Guarantee is its assurance that you won’t be responsible for any unauthorized transactions and it uses advanced encryption technology to prevent unauthorized access to your accounts and to protect your online identity.


PayPal (Free)

PayPal

In Japan many have thrown away their wallets in favor of paying for everything from train tickets to beer from a vending machine with their mobile phones. We’re not quite there yet but the PayPal app provides a tantalizing glimpse at this future. It provides complete access to your PayPal account allowing you to check your balances and send money to your friends and family, all from your iPhone. It supports 16 currencies and is secured by your existing PIN or password. It’s a good start but I’d like to see it go further. Missing is any way of displaying your transaction history and I’d also like to see it use the notification indicator on the app icon to show when money has arrived in your account.


Loan Shark ($4.99)

FoggyNoggin Software

Designed to help you navigate the often treacherous waters of financial lending, Loan Shark provides a number of features that let you calculate and compare loans from different vendors. You can calculate any component of a loan, including payment, interest rate or loan amount, see the full Amortization Table for the loan’s lifespan and play with “what-if” scenarios that let you determine the effect of making extra, higher, or lower payments. Loan Shark can help you determine how long it will take to pay off that credit card, determine how close you are to paying off your mortgage, and compare the cost of different loans, among many other uses. Kudos to FoggyNoggin Software for an easy-to-use and good looking interface that works well on a mobile device.

Bonus feature: Lets you locate nearby banks using the iPhone’s location-awareness


Tipulator (99 cents)

Tap Tap Tap

Tipulator stands out in a crowded field of tip calculators (it’s often said that the true test of how successful a new platform will be is how quickly a tip calculator appears for it) by marrying cute graphics with easy-to-use number dials. You can probably split the check without it but you won’t have as much fun doing it. And for 1/3 the price of your last latte, you owe it to yourself to at least try it.




Tiptap (Free)

Made With Bananas

More traditional but no less useful is the free Tiptap which is one of the most straightforward tip calculators I’ve seen. Featuring a large custom keypad and a large picker wheel, it’s extremely finger friendly, a plus when when your dining companions are tapping on their wallets and waiting for you to tell them how much they owe. You can choose to enable rounding, splitting, or tax support and Tiptap works with multiple currencies and multiple languages (English, French, Spanish, Italian, Dutch, German, Swedish and Japanese).




PocketMoney ($9.99)

Catamount Software

This venerable mobile checkbook first appeared 14 years ago on the Apple Newton and has since been available on Palm and Windows Mobile devices. Long time PDA users transitioning to the iPhone and former Quicken users alike will welcome its powerful approach to tracking your finances. PocketMoney can track an unlimited number of accounts, can auto-complete transactions based on payee, and will generate expense reports and pie charts. PocketMoney can import database files from the Palm version and also Quicken Interchange Format (QIF). You can even sync these files over a WiFi network using a free desktop app.


SplashMoney ($9.99)

SplashData

SplashMoney is another mobile checkbook that is well known from its implementation on Palm and Windows Mobile. SplashMoney allows you to track different account types: checking, savings, credit card, cash, asset, liability, money market and line of credit. You can create a budget and track and analyze your spending with customizable reports and charts. SplashMoney bests PocketMoney by connecting wirelessly to many online US banks using the same DirectConnect service as Quicken and Microsoft Money. In order to sync with the desktop, you’ll need to purchase the desktop version of SplashMoney separately.


Day Bank ($3.99)

Quantum Quinn

Day Bank is a pocket-sized check register that has been built specifically for the iPhone with a number of features that take advantage of the phone’s capabilities. Unlike the others included here, Day Bank seems particularly suited for entering transactions on the go and tracking your cash spending. Transaction entry is particularly speedy and the app uses the iPhone’s camera to capture images of receipts or purchased items. I like the ability to easily filter the view by day, week, and month. Day Bank isn’t as full featured as its competitors and currently can’t serve as your primary money manager due to its inability to reconcile transactions but it is improving rapidly and in its next version will support transaction geo-tagging, the ability to rename categories, QIF, CSV, & XML export, WiFi backup and restore and more.


Pennies ($2.99)

Design By A Knife

Pennies is a slick expense tracker with an interface that looks like it could have come straight from Apple. It doesn’t pretend to be a full-featured money manager like SplashMoney or PocketMoney but what it does do it does exceedingly well. It lets you quickly establish a monthly budget and record and track your daily expenses against it. Large finger friendly buttons and fun features such as a fuel gauge that indicates how much money is left in your budget make Pennies a joy to use. If you still rely on cash for your daily purchases and only want to make sure you are meeting your budget goals, Pennies is a good choice.


53 Comments so far

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  1. These apps are great, but I’d _really_ love a Mint app :)

    Pretty please? *bambi eyes* <3

  2. This is all well and good, but when are we going to get a Mint.com iPhone app? Mint is somewhat usable through Safari, but it would be really nice to have an app that showed my current account balances, transaction history, and budget.

  3. Any chance there will be a Mint.com iPhone app anytime soon? I would sure love to use one!

  4. I don’t doubt that some of these are worth-while financial apps, but when can we expect a mint.com app? I love the interface and usability of mint.com, but accessing it from my iPhone via the web is daunting when all I want to do is quickly check my budget.

  5. Like the masses say…. I was hoping for a new, native Mint app to be #1 at the bottom, but no such luck. Please, please make it so!

  6. Phil U.

    OK, I’ll be the fifth one to ask for an mint.com iPhone app. Or at least an iPhone optimized web site.

  7. I’d love to see the bottom separated out with 4 tabs:

    - Alerts
    Alerts just views all notifications, with ability to dismiss.

    - Accounts (with current $amounts)
    Each account added, with current value.

    - Budgets
    Track where you are on your monthly budget, so you can see if this purchase will put you over the top.

    - Full Transaction List
    A list of all transactions with the ability to:
    1. Manually input a transaction at the time of purchase, which could then look for discrepancies in amount once the charge has shown up on the actual account.
    2. Adjust category / split / etc.

  8. ditto, ditto, ditto, ditto. Bring on the Mint iPhone app!

  9. Yes!! an iPhone application!!

    What do I want? (1) An ability to put in transactions as they happen to have my actual balance, not the balance from the last time my bank was contacted. (2) A way to seamlessly sync those pending transactions to the actual transactions when they come across the mint website. (3) Budgeting features. Question, do I have enough money to buy this Starbucks right now? or how much gas can I afford to put in my tank? Can I easily find that info, without doing the math in my head :-) .

    Thanks and looking forward to seeing the app

  10. We are excited to read about the interest in a Mint iPhone app. In fact, we’re busy working on one right now. I won’t go deep into all of the features and functionality we’ll include. Suffice it to say it will cover many of the ones on your wish list. I can’t share the exact timing on the release but we hope to have it on your phone soon.

    If you want to have some input, take a moment to tell us what you would like to see in a Mint iPhone app.

    Thanks for your enthusiasm for Mint!

    Aaron Forth
    VP Product

  11. I would love to see an iPhone app! For me, the ability to manually input transactions is not appealing, but the ability to edit categories on transactions is really important. I would use an iPhone app primarily to check budgeting and balances. To keep my budgeting accurate, I need to be able to change the category of transactions (mint.com doesn’t know that I just bought that stuff at Target as a gift, not just my own shopping). I’d also love to be able to see the Cash vs. Debt box (motivating!) and the income versus expense bar somewhere in the app.

    This would be killer to move Mint.com to the top as the go-to mobile banking app for the iPhone…

  12. Virgil

    I would love to write that Mint iPhone App. :) I currently have one published app, Real Cost, which has an update pending to fix a few small issues. It’s free so all are free to check it out and if anyone from Mint reads this, feel free to contact me about concerning iPhone development. To those that download the app, the support site is a placeholder so any contact will have to be done via e-mail. The address is listed both on the Apple Store and in the application.

  13. Seriously. Mint. iPhone. Now.

  14. Jiff Jones

    IPhone just totally ROCKS

    http://www.privacy.es.tc

  15. rvassar

    Tip is the best ‘Tip Calculator’. From the web site “With “Mirror” you can confirm that every food charge in your credit card bill is for an amount with mirrored digits (e.g. $37.73) and that no one tried to skim a bit off the top.” Check it out at http://pipo.us/iPhone/Tip

  16. Katie P

    I completely agree with everyone else, my first thought was “Where’s the Mint.com app?”

  17. How about http://streetread.com/m

    All the financial news you can get – new site + stocks (free)

  18. Dr. Smith, John K

    Mint.com over the recent arrival I don’t know how I managed my money before (lots of juggling of multiple accounts, stocks, retirement Founds, TSP, and a few credit cards). The iPhone being the next leash to the internet and our personal life toolbox, its only a matter of time before Mint is a native iPhone app. Minters get as many people Minting as possible, it will help the users financial success, and the future of Economics success.

    Dr. Smith, John K

  19. Benjamin Thompson

    I search about once a week for a Mint app.

  20. Christopher

    I’d like to cast my vote for a Mint app as well!

  21. It’s websites like this that makes things easier for me. Just going to the app store in itunes is confusing.

  22. A mint.com iPhone app would make me happy…
    :0)

  23. Yes work on that Mint.com app, but not for the IPhone…Android please! Gphone compatibility! Ability to export data to google docs, itll be great. Better platform and more potential to expand it! Just my 0.02!

  24. A mint.com native iPhone application would be amazing. I’m throwing my vote in for one!

  25. Michael

    Mint iPhone app! Let me input my cash transactions PLEASE!!!!!!!

  26. I will be the FIRST to say this! We need a MINT app for the iphone. Hey wait…I am not the first AT ALL!!!

  27. Jason S

    MINT IPHONE APP!!!! YEEEEAAAAHHHHH!!!! :) )

    Would love to be a beta tester if you need one!

  28. I agree a mobile app would really be helpful but let’s bot limit it to an iPhone app only. I don’t want to start a phone war but there are a lot of BlackBerry users and other phone brands that would also love access.

    Thanks!

  29. mint app please. or release a Mint API and I’ll make the app for you guys :D

    I’d work really effin hard on it too cos it would be something that I would use as well!!

  30. A mint.com iPhone app would make my life. The sad part is, I’m dead serious.

  31. I strongly agree with doctor S’s suggestions. Especially about getting a mint.com app for the android operating system. Although android is only on one phone right now there are already 1.5 million of those phones pre ordered and android will be on many phones in the future.

  32. Hey Lee,
    nice one, only if you could’ve thrown a rating for each acc2 u.

    can we see some other reviews of iphone apps? different categories, only top 10 apps in each.

  33. Lee Sherman

    thanks @Pranay, there are lots of new iPhone apps that have appeared since we did this article so we may be reviewing more in the future

  34. Michael

    Another yay for a Mint iPhone app.

    Seriously, Mint has the potential to be the one shining example of what “free” means in the new economy. Guaranteed, those who use Mint and trust it with their finances, will find that it changes every aspect of how they handle their financial life, so long as Mint gives the people the features they want and continues as a portal for financial businesses to reach out to users and help them save and expand their credit value.

    So please, Mint, I hope you don’t get big head from sheer popularity, and remember what free means and use it as an effective business model of the future and be the example that the rest of the business world can look to. Perhaps I sound a bit harsh in assuming that Mint will be a business like any other, but I’ve been a bit jaded by the companies that promise change and to give consumers what they want, only to never live up to it. Times are trying, and that’s why we need a new challenger in the financial world that can live up to its name.

  35. Mint app? Yes please.

    Even a mobile version that a ton of websites have that is formatted and optimized for mobile browsers would be great.

    http://m.mint.com ?

  36. Chris Loughnane

    just got my new Tmobile G1, and it is just excellent. At first blush, Mint.com appears to work just fine. Still, in the spirit of convenience (a.k.a. mint.com) it would be great to have an app. And with 1.5M preorders (http://gizmodo.com/5062688/t+mobile-sells-15-million-g1-pre+orders). It looks to be the OS of choice.

  37. Yes, we really need a Mint.com iPhone app–vote me in!

  38. GO MINT FOR THE IPHONE!

    Free iPhone Webapps
    webapps.ifthensoft.com

  39. Mobile Banking and Bloomberg are great.

    I also found some other good finance ones at

    http://www.igoapps.com/search/do_search/4/3/2/1/10

  40. Agree that aMint.com API is needed. Our company makes ibrowz, a universal widget platform for all Windows Mobile and (soon) Blackberry phones. If you had an API, we could give all of those users that same experience iPhone users enjoy. Every try to access Mint on a Windows Mobile phone built-in browser? Uhg!

  41. Peter R

    Bloomberg is good and free but the quotes are delayed and you have no way to track your own ports. My fav at the mo is PortfolioLive. It only came out last week and it is great. RT prices and some cool port management. You have to pay for it, but the features are defintately worth it and I would definately recommend you check it out.

  42. Saijo George

    Dont buy Splash Money. The bloody thing is full of bugs.

  43. Pound23

    You guys forgot PortfolioLive … hands down the best Portfolio Management tool for the iPhone. PL has real time quotes, multiple user definable ports and tons of cool features.

  44. You could try using my company’s BisCal financial calculator too.

  45. hey,,,,,,,,,,,,, ilove iphone & i want it

  46. Korben

    Either m.mint.com or a G1/ iPhone app would be awesome.
    I check Mint at least 3 times weekly

  47. Hannah

    Do any of these have applications have a table view like the AcctPad.com app? I’m also looking for the ability to print month reports to PDF.

  48. I provide the application iPortefeuille. It allows you to manage portfolios in any currencies. Very useful if you have for example european stocks in your portfolios and you want to know the exact price in dollar. You can also manage found, obligations etc.

    The application is available here: http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewSoftware?id=321162682&mt=8

    Try it

  49. Billing app

    If you have not yet seen or used a true to form Billing credit card terminal app you should check this out as it is almost free at just 99¢. It is called Billing credit card terminal by spartadata.

    Here is the direct link:
    http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewSoftware?id=326255801&mt=8

    Website:
    http://www.spartadata.com

    Youtube Video:
    http://www.youtube.com/user/spartadata

  50. Guys we have one more iPhone apps that can help you mange you’re Business Expense better it’s called check it out in the appstore –> http://bit.ly/PennyLog

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