News

If you currently have a Mint account and don't want to transfer your info to Credit Karma, you have the option of downloading and deleting your financial data from the service before it expires.
Intuit is urging current Mint users to move to Credit Karma—another Intuit-owned tool—because account balances, historical net worths and transactions from the past three years can be migrated.
With the Mint app closing on March 23, 2024, here is what to look for in a new budget app and how to ease the transition.
Owner Intuit will shift Mint users over to its other subsidiary, Credit Karma, before finally axing the 17-year-old service on January 1st.
Both Mint and Monarch help users with financial tracking and budgeting, aggregating data on income, spending, and balances from accounts at banks, brokerages, and other financial institutions.
Mint, the budgeting app, offers a streamlined way to monitor your financial situation without poring over a spreadsheet.
Mint, acquired by Intuit in 2009, is a free personal finance app. It has long been one of the most widely used and highly rated budget apps. Mint links to nearly all types of users’ financial ...
Users will no longer have access to their Mint accounts on Jan. 1, 2024, or sooner if they choose to migrate to the Credit Karma app before that date.
With Mint shutting down, here is what to look for a new budget app and how to ease the transition.
Users will no longer have access to their Mint accounts on Jan. 1, 2024, or sooner if they choose to migrate to the Credit Karma app before that date.