This content has been selected, created and edited by the Finextra editorial team based upon its relevance and interest to our community. Budgeting app Mint will be killed off on 1 January, with users ...
Intuit’s Mint personal-finance service wants me to know it’s sorry. Again. “We’re sorry!” its investments page bleats when I try to view my mutual funds ...
Personal budgeting software can offer so many excellent benefits — and the major number one benefit is that you’ll get all your financial ducks in a row. You’ll also get to test drive several nifty ...
Intuit is shutting down its free budgeting app Mint, which had 3.6 million active users in 2021, Bloomberg reports. The company will absorb users into its other service called Credit Karma when Mint ...
This article is reprinted by permission from NerdWallet. Intuit Inc. announced this week that it will shut down Mint on Jan. 1, 2024. The company’s decision to discontinue the popular budgeting app ...
The very last holdouts will lose their access to Mint in a month. Mint was one of the very first budgeting apps out there, and its many devoted users were sent scrambling last year when parent company ...
When financial software maker Intuit acquired Mint.com, there was quite a bit of uncertainty as to what would happen to the popular online financial service. More often than not, when a startup is ...
Aaron Patzer, now an Intuit vice president following its acquisition of Mint.com, is now faced with uniting two distinctly different personal-finance software brands. Andrew Nusca is the editor of ...
Intuit’s personal-finance app now lets users pay for an ad-free, feature-rich version. Intuit’s Mint app now offers a new way to save money–and another to spend more. The Mountain View-based company ...
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