![]() ![]() On the other hand, both Money and MoneyWell's iPhone apps appear to have more considered user interfaces than iFinance. ![]() iFinance also appeared to be the best at handling various international bank accounts - at least some of the others (I forget which) were highly US-centric (which may or may not be a problem for you). The importers in the other three apps are primitive by comparison. ![]() iFinance's importer is both smart (figured out formats by itself) and flexible (allows you easily to override it where it gets it wrong). If I can't get my financial data into a a finance application (with at least relative ease), that application may as well not exist. This sounds like a trivial thing, but it's really crucial. (I have bank accounts in two countries, just to make things more complex.) I eventually settled on iFinance, since Money, MoneyWell and iBank all stumbled over… I guess you'd call it the 0th hurdle: Neither of them could cleanly import CSV files generated by my online banking. One of my requirements was an application that synchronises with a companion iPhone app - I don't always have my Mac with me when making purchases. The four I can remember (there were more) are: I evaluated a couple of them about a year ago.
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