u/Clam_Glam

Creating budgeting features is actually the easy part. You can add charts, reminders, categories, savings goals, achievements, and all kinds of useful tools. But none of that matters if people stop using the app after a few days.

The real challenge isn’t tracking money. It’s helping people stay consistent without making the process feel stressful, repetitive, or overwhelming.

Because most people don’t quit budgeting apps because they’re lazy or don’t care.

That’s what I’m trying to solve while building this app. Something that feels helpful, light, motivating, and easy to come back to every day.

Just better habits over time.

What usually makes you stop using budgeting apps?

reddit.com
u/Clam_Glam — 16 days ago

Girl math is funny… until your bank account sees the receipts 😅

You buy something for $40…

…but return another item for $30…

So technically it only cost $10.

We’ve all created this kind of logic at some point.

Now I’m curious… What’s your best girl math story?

reddit.com
u/Clam_Glam — 17 days ago

- It’s usually the small daily spending that quietly adds up over time. Coffee here, takeaway there, subscriptions, random convenience buys… each one feels small in the moment, but together they can shape your entire month.

That’s one of the ideas behind the app I’m building.

I want it to help you clearly see where your money goes: percentage by percentage across categories like rent, bills, food, transport, and everyday spending.

And at the end of each month, you’ll get a simple visual summary showing:

- your total expenses

- your income

- how much you managed to save

- and the bigger picture of your spending habits

Would something like this help you stay more aware of your money?

reddit.com
u/Clam_Glam — 19 days ago