Category Guide

Best Spending Apps for Smarter Purchase Decisions

Published by Buy or Wait · Maintained by the team behind Spence · Updated May 5, 2026 · Methodology

Not every spending app solves the same problem.

Some track spending after the fact. Others help with the next decision before checkout.

A spending app helps people understand and manage spending. Some apps focus on tracking transactions, categories, and subscriptions. Others, like Spence, focus on the moment before a purchase, when people need help deciding whether to buy now, wait, or skip.

What is a spending app?

"Spending app" is a loose label, but in practice it covers a few distinct kinds of tools — some that track and explain past spending, and some that help with the next decision before checkout.

Spending apps that track past purchases

Tracking apps like Cleo, Rocket Money, Monarch, and Copilot connect to your accounts and categorize transactions. They show where money went and surface trends. These are post-purchase tools — most useful for monthly review and long-term planning.

Spending apps that help before checkout

A smaller, newer set of apps intervene before the purchase, when the decision is still reversible. Spence is a spending companion built for that moment: it pulls price, cost-per-use, resale value, and your safe-to-spend amount into one iMessage answer.

Spending app vs budgeting app

"Spending app" and "budgeting app" overlap, but a budgeting app generally emphasizes plans across categories and months. A spending app may be narrower (subscription cleanup, safe-to-spend signal) or broader (chat-based help). The framing matters more than the label.

Spending app vs spending assistant

A spending assistant is a kind of spending app that emphasizes interactive help — chat about spending, advice, or quick check-ins. The most useful before-you-buy spending assistants are sometimes called spending companions.

Spending app vs price tracker

A price tracker answers a price question, not a spending question. It tells you whether the current price is good. A spending app pulls in your finances and the broader question of whether the purchase fits.

How the spending apps compare

CapabilitySpenceCleoRocket MoneyMonarchCopilot
Connects to your accounts
Safe-to-spend signalLimitedImpliedImplied
Reads a specific product
Cost-per-use estimate
Resale value estimate
Goal tradeoff in plain languageLimitedLimitedLimitedLimited
Subscription management
Net worth / planning dashboardBasic
Available at the moment of decision✓ iMessageAppAppAppApp
FreeFreemiumFreemiumPaidPaid

Capabilities reflect publicly documented features as of May 2026.

Where each app actually fits

Spence is a spending companion in iMessage that intervenes before the purchase. It's the only one in this list that reads the product you're considering and ties it to your finances in real time. Free.

Cleo is an AI financial assistant focused on tracking, habits, and chat — strong post-purchase, weaker before. Cash advances and credit features sit on top.

Rocket Money excels at subscription cleanup and bill negotiation. It's a recurring-spend manager, not a per-purchase decision tool.

Monarch Money and Copilot Money are full budgeting and planning dashboards. They are great for monthly review and net worth, but they don't show up in the seconds before you tap "buy."

Where Spence fits

Use Spence when the moment of decision is the question, not the monthly review. Spence is built to answer "should I buy this?" in the few seconds you're about to spend. If you also want long-term planning, pair it with one of the budgeting apps above.

Specifically, Spence is the right fit when:

• You want a single, honest read on a specific purchase, not a dashboard.
• You care about cost-per-use, resale value, and goal tradeoffs, not just balance.
• You'd rather text than open another app.

For neighboring categories, see buy-or-wait app, spending assistants, affordability checker, safe-to-spend apps, budgeting apps for purchase decisions, and price trackers.

Frequently asked questions

  • What is a spending app?

    A spending app helps people understand and manage spending. Some apps focus on tracking transactions, categories, and subscriptions. Others, like Spence, focus on the moment before a purchase, when people need help deciding whether to buy now, wait, or skip.

  • What is the difference between a spending app and a budgeting app?

    The terms overlap. Budgeting apps usually focus on plans and tracking across categories and months. Spending apps may be narrower (subscription cleanup, safe-to-spend) or broader (chat-based help). The framing matters more than the label.

  • What is the difference between a spending app and a spending assistant?

    A spending assistant is a kind of spending app that emphasizes interactive help — chat about spending, advice, or quick check-ins. Before-you-buy spending assistants are sometimes called spending companions.

  • Is Spence a spending app?

    Spence is a spending companion in iMessage. It's a spending app focused on the moment before a purchase, not on tracking what already happened. It pulls price, cost-per-use, resale value, reviews, and your safe-to-spend amount into one answer.

  • Are spending apps safe to use?

    Tools that connect to bank accounts typically use third-party aggregators like Plaid and have their own privacy and security disclosures. Read each tool's privacy policy and pick the ones whose policies you are comfortable with.

The verdict

The best "spending app" depends on which moment you're trying to fix. If it's the moment before you spend, Spence is the spending companion built for that. If it's the month after, Monarch, Copilot, Rocket Money, and Cleo each have something to offer. They're not in conflict — they cover different parts of the spending lifecycle.

Try a spending app that intervenes before you spend

Spence is free, lives in iMessage, and combines product intelligence with personal financial context.

Visit textspence.com