Published 15 May 2026 · 7 min read · By Billout
Mint shut down — how to track bills and subscriptions now
Mint is gone. Here is how to track bills, subscriptions, and savings in a focused web app without rebuilding a full PFM setup.
Intuit shut down Mint in 2024. Millions of users lost a familiar dashboard for bills, budgets, and subscriptions. Credit Karma absorbed some features, but many people wanted something simpler and web-friendly.
If Mint was your bill and subscription hub, you do not need a full replacement on day one. Start with the jobs Mint did best: recurring bills, subscriptions, and visibility into what's due.
What to look for in a Mint alternative
Decide what you actually used Mint for. Investment tracking and credit scores need different tools than bill tracking. If bills and subscriptions were the core job, pick an app that leads with those — not net worth charts.
Billout is a web app for bills, subscriptions, payments, and savings goals. It is free to start and runs in your browser — no new mobile app required.
Migrate in an afternoon
Export or list your recurring items from old Mint exports or bank statements. Add each bill and subscription to your new dashboard with amount and due date.
You will not replicate every Mint feature overnight — and you may not need to. A focused bill and subscription tracker often beats a bloated dashboard you never open.
Related: Learn more on Billout