![]() I'm on track.Īnyhow, I'm a good excel user and I just download the excel format because it's easiest. I downloaded recently to do half the year because of some changes and I wanted to get a feel for where I stand mid-year (for this year only). You can do it as often as you want - I just look at it every once in a while because I'm pretty used to spending about the same amount every month (with some variations). I normally just do one per year for tax prep and spending/budget. My bank allows data downloads in several formats. But of course, your comfort level may vary, and that is what is most important. This is especially useful if you have many many accounts.Īll this to say, I think it’s just easier to use something like Mint than to manually go in and download all your transactions to a CSV file and upload, use custom sheets, etc, etc, etc. ![]() And then you also need to weigh the fact that since Mint will update you on all your accounts activity multiple times a day, that you have the opportunity to catch fraud right at the source. You also probably have been involved a breach before - and all your information is already out there. And even if it did, you should have 2 factor authentication enabled. And if it is breached, you’d be one of 10s of millions involved in the breach, further lowering the chances anything specifically targeted towards you happens. You’re more likely to have your e-mail compromised than Intuit - the largest tax preparation company in the country - is to be breached. I think the worry about a financial institution being breached and its impact on you is simply overblown.
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