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Spreadsheet Finance vs App-Based Budgeting

Most personal finance apps are built around their features. Tiller is built around yours. Compare approaches, explore alternatives, and understand why spreadsheet-based finance gives you more control.

Spreadsheet Finance vs App-Based Budgeting

Every budgeting app makes the same promise: download our app, connect your accounts, and we’ll help you manage money better. Many deliver on that promise. They’re polished, user-friendly, and full of features.

But there’s a tradeoff. Apps force you into their system: their budgeting method, their categories, their reporting, their vision of how personal finance should work. If you fit the mold, great. If you don’t—if you need something custom, flexible, or specific to your situation—you’re out of luck.

Tiller takes a different approach. Instead of prescribing a method, Tiller gives you automation inside the tool you already know: a spreadsheet. You get the flexibility of spreadsheets (formulas, customization, complete data control) plus the convenience of automation (daily transaction updates, automatic categorization, connected accounts).

This isn’t right for everyone. Some people prefer the simplicity of an app. But for people who think in systems, who want complete control over their financial data, or who’ve outgrown rigid budgeting apps, Tiller offers something genuinely different.

How Tiller Compares to Popular Personal Finance Apps

Choosing the right financial tool depends on how you think about money. Some people want an app to guide them. Others want a system they can shape themselves.

Tiller sits in a different category than most budgeting apps. It’s not trying to be Monarch, YNAB, or Mint. It’s not trying to make budgeting “easy” by hiding complexity. Instead, Tiller gives you the raw materials—automated transaction data in a spreadsheet—and lets you build what works for you.

How Tiller Compares to Popular Personal Finance Apps

Key differences:

  • Data ownership: Your spreadsheet, your data, always accessible
  • Flexibility: Spreadsheet formulas and functions vs. app features
  • Customization: Build any system you want vs. predefined workflows
  • Learning curve: Requires spreadsheet comfort vs. guided app experience
  • Platform: Google Sheets/Excel vs. proprietary apps
  • Longevity: Spreadsheets work forever vs. app company dependency

Tiller vs YNAB

Tiller vs Quicken Simplifi

The Case for Spreadsheet-Based Personal Finance

Spreadsheets aren’t trendy. They’re not usually the first thing people think of when they want to “fix” their finances. But they’re powerful, flexible, and—when automated properly—surprisingly practical.

The Case for Spreadsheet-Based Personal Finance

Why spreadsheets work for money management:

  • You own the data: No company controls your financial information
  • You control the system: Build exactly what you need, nothing more or less
  • Formulas = power: Calculate anything, analyze everything, customize completely
  • It scales with you: Add rental properties, side businesses, investment accounts—no feature limits
  • It’s familiar: Millions of people already know how to use spreadsheets
  • It works offline: No internet dependency for viewing your financial data
  • It’s permanent: Spreadsheets will work in 10 years; apps may not exist

The automation gap Tiller fills: The traditional problem with spreadsheet finance is manual data entry. Tiller solves that by automatically updating your spreadsheet with transaction data every morning. You get the power of spreadsheets without the tedious maintenance.

Which Approach Is Right for You?

Consider an app if you:

  • Want a guided, prescribed budgeting system
  • Prefer mobile-first experiences
  • Don’t want to think about how the system works
  • Like automated insights and recommendations
  • Need something that “just works” out of the box

Consider Tiller (spreadsheets) if you:

  • Think in systems and workflows
  • Want complete control over your financial data
  • Already use spreadsheets for other parts of your life
  • Have specific tracking needs that apps don’t support
  • Value data ownership and flexibility over convenience
  • Want to customize every aspect of your financial system
  • Need to track complex financial situations (multiple businesses, rental income, etc.)
  • Want a system that you’ll never outgrow

The truth: Both approaches work. The best tool is the one you’ll actually use. For some people, that’s a polished app. For others, it’s an automated spreadsheet. Only you know which fits your brain.

Spreadsheet vs App-Based Finance FAQ

The core difference is flexibility and data ownership. Budgeting apps like Monarch, YNAB, and Copilot are self-contained systems—you use their categories, their budgeting method, their reports, and their interface. Tiller is different: it delivers your financial data into a spreadsheet (Google Sheets or Excel) that you control completely. You can build any system you want, use any formulas or visualizations, and own your data outright. Tiller is for people who want the power of spreadsheets plus the convenience of automated bank feeds.

It depends on how you like to work. YNAB is an excellent tool if you want a structured, guided zero-based budgeting system with a dedicated mobile app. Tiller is the better choice if you prefer to work in spreadsheets, want complete flexibility over your budgeting method, or need to track financial situations that don’t fit neatly into a predefined app (like rental income, business expenses, or complex investment portfolios). Many users actually come to Tiller after outgrowing YNAB’s rigid structure.

Free budgeting apps typically monetize through ads, data partnerships, or upsells—and they can shut down unexpectedly (as Mint did in 2024). Tiller is a paid subscription with no ads and no data selling. More importantly, Tiller puts your financial data in a spreadsheet you own—not locked inside a proprietary app. If you cancel, your historical data stays in your spreadsheet. For people who want a long-term, private, and flexible financial system, Tiller offers something free apps don’t.

Tiller works best for people who are comfortable with spreadsheets (or willing to learn), want full control over how their finances are tracked, have specific or complex financial tracking needs that apps can’t handle, or simply prefer working in Google Sheets or Excel over mobile apps. It’s particularly popular with people who think in systems: those who want to customize their financial dashboards, run their own analysis, or build workflows that reflect how they actually manage money—not how an app thinks they should.

For many users, yes. Quicken has long been the go-to for desktop-based personal finance management, but it’s expensive, Windows-centric, and tied to its own proprietary interface. Tiller offers a modern alternative: automated transaction imports into Google Sheets or Excel, support for all major financial institutions, and complete flexibility to build the financial system you want. Users migrating from Quicken often find Tiller provides the same core value (automated data, comprehensive tracking) in a more flexible, cross-platform environment.

Three things: ownership, flexibility, and longevity. With a spreadsheet, you own your data completely—it lives in your Google Drive or OneDrive, not on a company’s server. You can build any system you want using formulas, pivot tables, and custom visualizations. And spreadsheets will work indefinitely—they don’t get discontinued, pivot to a new business model, or lock you out of your history. Apps are convenient, but spreadsheets give you a financial system you’ll never outgrow.