Five Free Alternatives to Quicken - Comments Page 1
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I've found a simple spreadsheet is better for my use than an overcomplicated finance program. Maybe I'm too broke to need anything more advanced, but, really, all I am tracking are my expenses. I wouldn't use an online service. Giving the passwords away to a stranger that may be vulnerable to being hacked is not something I consider a smart idea. Then again, they are also too complicated for my small amount of money....they don't need to know where I bank and where my investments are kept, with a password key to each of those. Nope, not happening. |
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I am using Quicken 2009 for Windows on my Mac with no problems. Of course, I had to first acquire Crossover from Codeweavers, Inc. Crossover Pro also allows me to use a select number of other Windows applications on the Mac. |
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I have to use a very old version of Quicken (2002) because I use several currencies (mostly USD and GBP) and that feature was removed from Quicken after the 2002 version. So far, Q2002 has continued to work on the later version of Windows (including W7 64-bit), but I am dreading the day that it fails to work. |
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Have not found an accounting solution for iMac Lion that is as good as Quicken Premier. My solution was to purchase "Crossover" which allows you to run Quicken Premier (and some other Windows Programs on an iMac Lion OS without having to also load Windows 7 on your system |
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If you'll hunt around a little, you'll find that Microsoft Money, although discontinued, is now available for open source download. |
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I looked into this recently when I had to reformat a hard disk and didn't want to buy new Quicken nor reinstall the old out-dated version. But I wanted to keep the history. In reading user reviews of all of these (I think) they all seemed to say that while they work well, they don't handle imported Quicken history, specifically split transactions. Does anyone know of any freeware that can import historical split transactions without turning the whole thing to gobbledygook? |
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Bob, are there any solid free Quicken alternatives that are small business-oriented? This article seemed to focus on personal finance options, though it appeared Gnucash might fill the needs of small business. Others worth considering? |
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I've been using Moneydance now for some time, after leaving Quicken. Meets my needs well. |
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I use Microsoft Money. No longer supported, so the online facilities don't work, but excellent stand-alone money manager. The Microsoft Money Plus Sunset versions are replacements for expired versions of Microsoft Money Essentials, Deluxe, Premium and Home and Business. |
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Friend told me that if you read the fine print with Mint.com you are giving Power of Attorney to the organization. Is this true? EDITOR'S NOTE: Sort of, but it's nothing evil. It's a limited power of attorney granting them permission to log in to your financial web sites and download your account information. |
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I use AceMoney and definitely recommend it. I do not use the Lite version. The premium version is only $30 on sale right now and I think the full price is $35. And it doesn't use so much of your computer's resources like QuickBooks does. The only feature of QuickBooks that I miss is the classes. |
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Hi Bob These look worthwhile, but I need a program that does payroll (currently using Quickbooks). Are there any free or reasonably priced alternatives that you could recommend? PS I got on the Internet Tourbus sometime in the mid-90's, but never thought of posting a question until now...must be the new format. |
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I've been using http://waveaccounting.com/ and like it. It can login to many banks (not mine) and import and has business features, invoicing, etc. |
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Good recommendations... BUT, to migrate from Quicken to "something else" would require the ability to import my most recent data from Quicken to The New Guy On The Block... so what do you recommend that He be? Otherwise, it is a question of the dreaded, "starting over" and "learning a new program".. which, like AOHELL captures the mind and activity of the user. |
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I have been a user of Mint for about two years now and it is a terrible program. It has lots of whistles and bells but a good number of them do not work. And if you write to their tech support you get boilerplate responses by people who do not read your requests. the most common response that I have received, regardless the question, is "sorry for the inconvenience, but our engineers are working on it." I've received that answer for nearly every question for two years with no end in sight. Once I receivEd a popup saying there was a problem and I should write [blank] email for more information. I did so and spent the next three months corresponding with someone whose name was "jeffrey" who kept telling me the "my" issue had been resolve, but absolutely refused to admit that he had no idea what the problem was. It was Twilight-Zone-ish. One famous problem with the program (frequently complained about in the forums) is the "Auto-categorization" feature. That is, when a transaction comes in from the bank and the merchant's name is left off or is unusual, Mint will pull something of similar price at random from one of the legitimate transactions of the last three or four months and apply it to the unknown transaction. It is a nightmare. I have to watch each day's debit card purchases to make sure that it does not rename gas for groceries or books for wine. And Mint, even though it invented the feature, incredibly tells us that it has no idea about how to turn it off. But with each complaint (and the forums are full of them), the response always is that the engineers are working on it. My hunch is that the reason they care so little about their users is that we are not the real customers. Their customers are the banks that advertise with them. Unless a high percentage of their users finally throw in the towel and have an impact on their advertising revenue, they will never change. |
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I'm using https://www.inexfinance.com/ and it's a fair alternative to Quicken. It's a web based personal finance program that runs on Windows, Mac and Linux. Apart from the basic expense tracking and budgeting tools, it allows to create personal events and set reminders that can be synced with my Google calendar as well. |
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Chirodoc. A good alternative at a very reasonable price is Medlin at Medlin.com I think it's like shareware. I use it in my CPA Practice. |
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Hi, I have used for several years in my small business Easy Cash Manager from Moor Computer Productions, fast simple and free. http://www.moor-software.com/0.php?page=easy-cash-manager |
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I'm still using Quicken 98 and have seen no reason to update it. It works fine for checking, savings and my investments including 401ks. If I can get that many years out of a program, I'm sure a person could justify spending $90 for the latest version. |
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I partially agree with Kit Times. I am also using quicken for windows for several years and it ideally suits my personal accounting, which by the way includes several bank accounts, credit card and investments (stocks & mutual funds). My only wish is to get that working in Linux, to which I plan to move. Some of the the later versions of quicken work in Linux on wine, but it is frankly too costly in India and also too tedious to convert all the old data. Any ideas on this are welcome with thanks. |
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