Personal Finance Tips — 2026-04-29
With Mint long gone, budgeting app shoppers are comparing standout alternatives like Quicken Simplifi, YNAB, Monarch Money, and PocketGuard in 2026. Meanwhile, a fresh BNN Bloomberg piece offers timely guidance on when and how to graduate from DIY investing to working with a financial adviser. This week also brings a useful reminder that setting screen-time caps on shopping apps is one of the simplest hacks to protect your savings.
Personal Finance Tips — 2026-04-29
Key Highlights
Finding a Financial Adviser: A Checklist Worth Bookmarking
A piece published yesterday (April 28) on BNN Bloomberg lays out exactly what Canadians—and investors generally—should look for when moving from self-directed platforms to professional advice. The article walks through fee structures, credentials, and fiduciary standards that separate trustworthy advisers from commission-driven salespeople. If your portfolio has grown to the point where you feel overwhelmed managing it alone, this is practical reading.

Best Budget Apps in 2026: The Field Has Settled
Following Mint's March 2024 shutdown, the market has matured. PCMag's freshly updated 2026 roundup hands its Editors' Choice to two apps: Quicken Simplifi for the best balance of ease and features, and YNAB for users who want to build a true spending plan rather than just track expenses.
NerdWallet's current guide agrees that YNAB remains a top pick despite its subscription cost, and highlights Monarch Money as the go-to for former Mint users who want a polished, full-featured replacement.
Rob Berger's independent review (updated within the past week) spotlights Tiller Money alongside YNAB as the only two apps that let you plan future bill payments—a critical feature for zero-based budgeters.
Quick Comparison: Mint Alternatives at a Glance
| App | Best For | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Quicken Simplifi | Ease + full features | Paid |
| YNAB | Zero-based planning | Paid |
| Monarch Money | Mint refugees, clean UI | Paid |
| PocketGuard | Simplicity | Free/Paid |
| Tiller Money | Spreadsheet power users | Paid |
Screen-Time Limits: The Forgotten Budget Hack
Fidelity's spring money-tips guide (published March 3, 2026) points out one embarrassingly easy trick most people skip: use your phone's built-in screen-time or digital-wellbeing settings to cap how many minutes per day you can spend inside shopping or social-commerce apps. Adding that friction alone reduces impulse buys for many users—no new app required.

Deep Dive
Should You Switch from a DIY Investment Platform to a Financial Adviser?
The BNN Bloomberg article published April 28 addresses a crossroads many investors hit after a few years of managing their own portfolios: when does self-management stop being empowering and start costing you money?
Signs it may be time:
- Your portfolio spans multiple account types (RRSP, TFSA, non-registered, possibly pension) and rebalancing has become a research project in itself
- You're approaching a major life event—retirement, inheritance, business sale—where tax-planning errors are expensive
- You find yourself second-guessing or paralyzed during market volatility rather than sticking to a plan
What to look for in an adviser (per the BNN Bloomberg piece):
- Fiduciary standard – Are they legally required to put your interests first, or are they held only to a "suitability" standard?
- Fee transparency – Flat fee, AUM percentage, or commission? Each creates different incentives.
- Credentials – CFP (Certified Financial Planner) and CFA (Chartered Financial Analyst) are widely recognized designations; verify them independently.
- Specialization – An adviser who works primarily with retirees may not be the best fit for a 35-year-old accumulating wealth aggressively.
The article notes that hybrid models—robo-advisers with a human overlay—have matured significantly and can bridge the gap for investors not ready to pay full advisory fees.
Budgeting Apps: Why the "Best" Depends on Your Method
The 2026 app landscape has clarified around two philosophies:
Tracking-first (spend, then categorize): Quicken Simplifi, Monarch Money, and PocketGuard shine here. You connect accounts, the app pulls transactions, and you review categories after the fact. Great for people who want visibility without changing how they spend.
Planning-first (give every dollar a job before you spend it): YNAB and Tiller Money lead this camp. These require more upfront effort but studies and user testimonials consistently show larger behavior changes and faster debt paydown.
Which should you pick?
- If you're coming from Mint and just want a smooth transition: Monarch Money
- If you want to change your relationship with money: YNAB
- If you live in spreadsheets: Tiller Money
- If you want the simplest possible setup: PocketGuard or Quicken Simplifi
This Week's Action
Pick one budgeting app and connect your primary checking account this week.
Don't spend the week researching the "perfect" app—that's procrastination dressed up as diligence. Based on the 2026 reviews above, start with Monarch Money (best Mint replacement, polished UX) or YNAB (if you want to genuinely change spending habits). Both offer free trials. Connect your main checking account, let it pull two weeks of transactions, and spend 15 minutes categorizing them. That single session will tell you more about your spending than a month of reading about budgeting.
This content was collected, curated, and summarized entirely by AI — including how and what to gather. It may contain inaccuracies. Crew does not guarantee the accuracy of any information presented here. Always verify facts on your own before acting on them. Crew assumes no legal liability for any consequences arising from reliance on this content.