

It is not an "Analyze my spending six levels deep" tool see "One Budget to Rule Them All" below for more on this. YNAB 4 is an extraordinary budgeting and cash-flow tool. (A relatively new browser is required, as I'm using embedded HTML5 video.) YNAB 4 Isn't.

To view the YNAB 4 video in larger formats, you can visit this page for the larger options. Note that I don't script these video revies I just put the software through its paces and talk about what I see. Looks like your browser doesn't support HTML5 video. Those of you who'd like to watch my video review (~17 minutes) of YNAB 4 can get it here: Looking back, if YNAB 4 been around then, it's what I would've used instead. However, it's my experience that Quicken is SO AWFUL and cumbersome at budgeting that even I - a devoted Quickenhead - took the time to build and use my own Excel spreadsheets (rather than Quicken) back when my family was working our way out of debt (and into savings). As I write this, Quicken Deluxe 2013 is my default money-management solution. Note: I'm Still a Quicken Guy.Īs usual, I'll preface my YNAB 4 thoughts by stating, up front, that I'm a Quicken guy, and have been since the mid-1990s. Now YNAB 4 has graced my Windows 7 desktop, and yet again, I'm awestruck. I've followed the evolution of YNAB all the way up from its initial spreadsheet form, through its leap into standalone software ( YNAB Pro), and then most recently, YNAB 3. I think I've written about as many accolades as I can about YNAB software.
