Who Actually Uses a Budget App With No Bank Sync?
I asked myself this question when I shipped Monee: a budget tracker that deliberately refuses to connect to your bank. No Plaid, no Open Banking, no OAuth. Just manual entry.
The honest answer surprised me.
The "Traditional" Fintech User Is Not My User
YNAB, Mint, Copilot -- they're built for the automation-first crowd. People who want categorization to happen while they sleep. Trend graphs that span 18 months. Net worth tracking dashboards.
That's a real segment. It's just not mine.
Three Profiles That Keep Coming Back
After watching ~60 sessions on the app (yes, I count my analytics in the dozens -- indie dev life), a pattern emerged.
The Privacy-First Developer
These folks aren't paranoid. They just understand what "connecting your bank" actually means. OAuth tokens. Data retention policies. Third-party API access to your transaction history. Every fintech app is a liability surface. They want their financial data in exactly one place: their own machine.
They use Monee because the storage model is simple: localStorage. No server. No account. Nothing to breach. They export to CSV and reconcile in a spreadsheet. For them, this is a feature, not a limitation.
The Recovering Overspender
Here's the unexpected one. Manual entry is slower. You have to open the app. Type the category. Enter the amount. That friction is the point.
When a purchase is automatic, it becomes invisible. The moment you manually log "Uber Eats - $34" you register that you've done it four times this week. Auto-sync removes that moment of registration. Manual entry keeps it.
One user told me: "I don't need to see where my money went. I need to feel it going."
The YNAB Refugee
YNAB costs $15/month. That's $180/year to track where your money goes. The irony isn't lost on them. People who are actively trying to spend less are being charged subscription fees by apps telling them to spend less.
Monee is free. Permanently. No premium tier. No "we're raising prices" email. No freemium trap.
They don't want features. They want the thing to work, be fast, and not charge them for the privilege.
What This Tells You About Product Design
The mistake I almost made: building for the average user who wants "everything." Bank sync. Smart categorization. AI insights. All of it.
The app that exists because I didn't build all that is better for a specific subset of people than any feature-complete app would be.
Constraints create clarity. Removing things forces you to understand who stays.
The people who stay when you remove a feature -- those are your real users.
Try it: https://monee-budget-tracker.vercel.app -- no account, no bank access, loads in 2 seconds.
Who are your "real users" once you strip the product down? Curious what others have found.
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