At the end of 2022, I discovered this software that I’ve been using all year. I’d like to hear your thoughts or experiences with GnuCash, or whatever system/program you use to track your personal finances!

For the ones unfamiliar, it’s based on a double-entry accounting system; every transaction always has at least two accounts involved. Example: if I spend 200 SEK on a restaurant, it goes from Assets:Cash to Expenses:Food.

Starting by creating my own accounts, it helped me immensely to have an overview of my general financial situation.

Around March, I found enlightening to re-define what expenses needed their own category from what I was unconsciously lumping into ‘others’. Having it all already logged, made it quite easy . The caveat is that all the entries are manual, but my finances are not as complex, so with 30-45 minutes a week I have it updated.

You can even create diagrams for your monthly expenses, or general balance, among other reports that come quite handy if you want to run a query.

  •  evatronic   ( @evatronic@lemm.ee ) 
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    410 months ago

    I do!

    Been using it for years. It’s the only double entry system I’ve found that I like.

    As others have noted, the reports kind of suck, however, the one feature I love is the tax report functionality.

    Tag any number of accounts as tax related, and then, at least for the US, the tax form and line/box number, and you can run the tax report that will, hopefully, give you a report for the selected period with stuff like “Form 1040 Box 32: $32,839.09” etc.

  • Is it possible to share an account between two people? The last time I tried it it was not possible, but that was a long time ago. Also, is there an Android client, or app or something?

  • Used Gnucash many years ago. I’m comfortable with double entry bookkeeping, but the charts and reports were disappointing.

    I switched to Ynab and then Moneydance, which is okay. If the charts and UI has improved I’ll take another look at Gnucash.

      • Charts in Ynab4 were fairly sophisticated. For example, I could easily drill down into categories on monthly income/expenses. They also looked great since the devs put a lot of thought into the UX.

        I switched to Moneydance after nYnab came out and Ynab4 was killed off. I’m not an adherent to Ynab’s budgeting philosophy and I didn’t see the worth in the monthly fee.

        Like Ynab4, Moneydance is a standalone product. It’s manual accounting, which I don’t mind. It’s quick to enter transactions, has a nice summary view, and can backup to separate locations. When I decide to migrate, I can export my data to QIF or other formats.

  •  JakenVeina   ( @JakenVeina@lemm.ee ) 
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    210 months ago

    I’ve tried it many times, but every time I just end up hating it. I’m probably biased by the fact that I’m a DEVELOPER of accounting software, and I’m too used to how our accounting is done in our own ecosystem.