Quick Summary
A guide to budgeting without sharing bank credentials - including apps that don't require linking, spreadsheet methods, and honest trade-offs.
You don’t have to give a third-party app access to your bank accounts. Plenty of people budget manually - entering transactions themselves, keeping financial data private, and still tracking every dollar.
It takes more effort, but for some people, that effort is worth it.
Looking for a private option? The Monthly Budget Template works entirely in Google Sheets - enter transactions manually, formulas handle calculations, your data stays in your control. No bank linking, no third-party access.
Why Skip Bank Linking
Security: Bank credentials are valuable targets, and aggregation services have been breached before. Storing those credentials with a third party concentrates risk.
Privacy: Financial data reveals where you shop, what you earn, and your spending habits. Some people prefer keeping that information off third-party servers entirely.
Awareness: Manual entry forces you to see every transaction. That friction can actually help - you process spending consciously instead of letting automated systems handle it invisibly.
Reliability: Bank connections break when security protocols change, syncing fails, or transactions disappear. Manual entry, by contrast, is predictably reliable.
These concerns aren’t universal - plenty of people use bank-linked apps without issues. But for those who prioritize control over convenience, manual methods remain a solid alternative.
From our experience: Privacy was a core design decision from day one. After selling our company, we had financial data we genuinely could not afford to have on third-party servers - acquisition details, investment positions, tax strategy numbers. Building tools that never required bank linking or external data sharing wasn’t a marketing choice. It was a personal requirement that became a product principle. - Stefan
Spreadsheets
Spreadsheets give you complete control with zero data sharing. Your budget lives on your device or in your personal cloud storage, and no third party ever sees it.
The workflow is straightforward:
- Create a sheet with income and expense categories
- Enter transactions (daily, weekly, whenever)
- Formulas calculate totals automatically
- Charts show patterns over time
The time cost runs about 5-10 minutes daily, or 20-30 minutes if you prefer to batch entries weekly.
Pre-built templates eliminate the setup work - formulas configured and categories ready to use.
This approach works well for people who want customization, don’t mind typing in cells, and care about long-term data ownership.
Manual-Entry Apps
Some budget apps work without bank connections.
Goodbudget uses envelope budgeting - you create spending categories, manually enter transactions, and see what’s left in each envelope. The free tier handles the basics.
EveryDollar follows zero-based budgeting, where every dollar is assigned before you spend it. The free version is manual-only, while bank linking requires premium at $80/year.
Fudget is extremely minimal - income at the top, expenses below, running balance. It works well if other apps feel overwhelming.
These apps give you the convenience of a mobile interface without sharing bank credentials. The trade-off is that your budget data still lives on their servers, just not your bank access.
Making Manual Work Sustainable
The challenge isn’t getting started - it’s consistency.
Pick a routine that fits your life - either daily entry (5 minutes each evening) or weekly batching (30 minutes catching up). Consistency matters more than frequency.
Simplify capture by keeping receipts in one spot and using your phone’s notes app for quick entries when you’re out. Photos of receipts work well for reference later.
Accept imperfection because missing a small transaction won’t ruin anything. Focus on capturing most of your spending, especially larger expenses.
Round to dollars since exact cents rarely matter for budget insights. It saves time without sacrificing accuracy.
The people who make manual tracking work long-term tend to have one thing in common: they found a routine that fit their life rather than trying to force a routine that didn’t.
What You Give Up
Automation isn’t purely marketing - there are real conveniences you give up:
- Automatic categorization (you do it yourself)
- Real-time balance visibility (check accounts separately)
- Effortless history (only goes back as far as your manual entry)
- Less work (let’s be honest - auto-import is easier)
If you’d abandon budgeting without automation, linked apps might be the better choice. A budget that actually gets used beats a private one that sits empty.
Related
- Net Worth Tracker - track assets and liabilities privately
- Annual Budget Template - year-long budget view
- Monthly Budget Template - monthly expense tracking