This app was mentioned in 27 comments, with an average of 2.11 upvotes
uso andromoney per tenere traccia delle mie entrate/uscite da ormai un anno e mezzo e mi trovo da dio
da ieri, per qualche strano motivo, non riuscivo più a registrare le ultime spese del weekend
dato che è un app per me ormai essenziale (sono uno che tiene traccia anche dell'euro speso al bar per un caffè) stamattina mando una segnalazione agli sviluppatori...
ora locale di invio mail 07:11
alle 8:21 mi arriva una mail di risposta, hanno già pubblicato un aggiornamento che sistema il problema
vorrei che in ufficio avessimo un quarto della loro efficienza
For expense and budget tracking we've been using an android app called Andromoney which has been fantastic. Highly recommend it. For flights and accomodation bookings we use Google Calendar. Quite often gmail automatically puts these things in our calendar but if it doesn't we do it manually with Gmail's "Create Event"..
There are also many free apps that help do that without the need of a computer, where you can also categorize your expenses, and automatically generate infographics such as pie charts of expenses per category. One example i know of is Andromoney but you can just search for "expense track" on your app store to find alternatives.
To track my personal spending, I use andromoney https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.kpmoney.android
For splitting bills and group expenses, my household uses splitwise https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.Splitwise.SplitwiseMobile
I use Andromoney the last 4 years. Very easy to use . I have tried others but always came back.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.kpmoney.android&hl=el
Io sto usando AndroMoney da un paio di mesi e mi trovo bene. È gratis
Para sure, is it this one? Playstore but I think eto rin yung nasa app store hahaha https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.kpmoney.android&hl=en&gl=US
If your phone is Android, I recommend AndroMoney. It's simple, straighforward, no fuss, nothing fancy or overly complicated. You just input your spending and income, categorise it and can visualise the total.
If you're in USA Mint is also a good option. Also available for iPjone here
I've tried many budget apps myself and I always get annoyed at them trying to be fancy and do stuff I don't need or give me options I can't change or give me articles about saving money that I didn't ask for (looking at you, Wallet).
AndroMoney is my favourite so far because of its simplicity.
I spent the last 4 years in Finland to get my PhD degree and I tracked all my expenses during the entire time. Inspired by this recent post, I decided to create this nice visualization of the data. I've seen a couple similar posts around on this sub, but I thought people might be interested as it's a longer time frame and maybe an interesting country.
I used AndroMoney to collect the data and SankeyMATIC to create the visualization.
Some interesting points: I could definitely save money by eating out less, but that happened mostly 2019 (when I was travelling a lot) and 2020 (home office, tiny flat with no real kitchen, couldn't eat at uni). Alcohol is expensive in Finland! I definitely should have bought a washing machine instead of using the laundrette around the corner... "Tracking mistake" is the discrepancy between what I tracked and the final result on the bank account / in the wallet.
The income side (not shown) is not very interesting, it's mostly salary (compared to other contries, PhD students get paid quite well in Finland!) and a bit more than what I spent.
Have a look at this: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.kpmoney.android A fantastic app.
AndroMoney ( Expense Track ) - a fantastic app!!!
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.kpmoney.android
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.kpmoney.android
Andromoney
I have been using this for last three years. Brilliant app. Can back up your data on Google drive.
Edit - years
Not accountant. I use AndroMoney.
Andromoney. I use it for the same purpose you're looking for. It says budget yadda yadda, but it can be a simple expense report.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.kpmoney.android
Check out Andromoney it's got all you could ask for AndroMoney
If you live in the city, ditch your car. People don't realise just how expensive driving is, because there are very high fixed costs, but you don't pay anything for most trips. Insurance, registration, petrol, tolls, parking. It all adds up. IIRC a typical Australian pays about 12k/year for their car. Catch public transport instead. It's so much cheaper (and safer. And personally I find driving stressfull, compared to browsing reddit on the bus. And better for the environment)
Even better, ride a bicycle. I cycle to and from work (35 min each way). It's free (well, maintanance costs average out to about 30c per ride). It also means I can save money (and time) by ditching my gym membership. Most people pay to drive to the gym, and then pay to use the gym. If you factor in travel time, that 30min gym session costs you 50 min of your life. I save money by cycling. And since it's at least as fast as the bus (faster on Friday afternoons), I'm getting 35 min of excersize for free, and it saves me about 5 minutes of my life.
Even if you can't cycle because you work really far away from home, ditch the gym membership. Most people just run on the treadmill. You don't need to pay 20$/wk to run. If you're not super serious, and you just want to get a bit toned, do pushups, situps etc. They cost 0$ and get you more than halfway there. Chin-up bars are easier to find/build than you think. One pair of weights is also pretty cheap. Unless you're a serious athlete or body builder, you don't need to pay a ridiculous gym fee just to use your body.
I only ever eat out if it's for a specific social occasion.
(Flavoured tuna is way more tasty and varied than you'd think. I wait till it's on sale for 1$/can then stock up on a dozen.)
I'm reluctant to take a taxi or uber anywhere. A 20 minute $20 ride comes to 60 $/h. Compare that to your own hourly rate, and you'll see it's not that cheap. Also, Uber with surge pricing is expensive. Full stop. I only ever get an uber/taxi if it's 3am and the next bus is 30 minutes away.
I'm a graduate living out of home earning about half of what I spend. I don't consider myself frugal, but apparently my coworker (same salary) is living paycheck by paycheck, whilst living with parents. The above points are the main differences between our spending habbits. So those things do add up.
It can help to use an app to track your spending, so you know what fraction of your money goes where. Personally I used AndroMoney for a while. (Then stopped once I had enough data to analyse my spending). But beware that I think they sync your personal data to google's servers without telling you.
Also, unless you're a gamer or developer, you probably don't need a 1000$ computer. Secondhand ones are super cheap. And if you think your computer is getting generally slow and you need a new one, you probably don't. Just do a factory reset, clean all the crap out, re-install only what you need, and it should be as good as new. A few years ago I had a laptop which was getting quite old and slow. I installed linux on it, which runs faster than windows by pretty much any metric. That allowed me to defer the purchase of a new laptop by a few years.
You can also save money by getting a cheap phone plan and cutting your data usage. I never play videos or stream music unless I'm on wifi. That keeps my usage below 1.5GB/Month, which costs 20$/month. Compare that to a 60$/month phone plan for more data than you need, on a phone replaced more often than you need.