Why I Finally Cancelled My YNAB Subscription After 3 Years
I'll be honest: I was a YNAB evangelist for three years.
I'm talking about the kind of person who would corner friends at dinner parties to explain the life-changing magic of giving every dollar a job. I bought the book. I watched every tutorial. I'd defended YNAB in Reddit arguments more times than I'd like to admit. The four rules genuinely changed how I thought about money.
Then I had a realization that changed everything.
I was already running my entire life in Notion. Projects, goals, habits, meal planning, content calendar, reading list, everything. Every morning I'd open Notion for my daily review, then switch to YNAB to check my budget, then back to Notion to plan my day. Two apps. Two mental models. Two systems for different parts of the same life.
Worse, I realized I was spending more time managing YNAB than actually budgeting. Splitting transactions across categories, reconciling accounts, moving money between envelopes, fixing import errors. YNAB had become a chore.
If any of this sounds familiar, you're not alone. In this guide, I'll break down exactly how YNAB and BankSync compare, who should use each one, and how I built a better budget system for half the price.
YNAB vs BankSync: Full Feature Comparison
Let's cut to the chase. Here's how these two tools actually stack up across the features that matter most:
YNAB vs BankSync Feature Comparison
| Feature |
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The Real Cost Difference: $96/Year Adds Up
Let's talk money, since that's literally what we're trying to manage better. YNAB's price has increased significantly over the years, and at $14.99/month (or $109/year), it's one of the most expensive budgeting apps on the market.
Pricing Comparison
What you'll actually pay over time
YNAB
Envelope budgeting app
- $180/year billed monthly
- $109/year billed annually
- No free tier available
- 34-day free trial only
- $540 over 3 years
BankSync
Bank data in your tools
- $84/year billed monthly
- $70/year billed annually
- Free tier with 1 connection
- 14-day free trial
- $252 over 3 years
What YNAB Does Exceptionally Well
Before I explain why I switched, let me be clear: YNAB is a genuinely excellent product. Those three years weren't wasted - the methodology fundamentally changed how I think about money. Here's what they do better than almost anyone:
The Four Rules Methodology
Give every dollar a job, embrace your true expenses, roll with the punches, age your money. These rules are genuinely life-changing for budgeting beginners.
Debt Payoff Tools
YNAB's approach to credit cards and debt is brilliant. The way it handles credit card spending and helps you break the paycheck-to-paycheck cycle is unmatched.
Active Community & Support
Free workshops, active subreddit, responsive support team. If you're learning to budget, the community is incredibly helpful and encouraging.
Polished Mobile Apps
The iOS and Android apps are genuinely excellent. Quick transaction entry, easy category checking, and a clean interface for on-the-go budgeting.
Goal Setting Features
Set targets for categories, track savings goals, and see exactly how much you need to set aside each month. Great for building specific savings habits.
Proven Track Record
YNAB has been around since 2004 and has helped millions of people get control of their finances. The methodology is battle-tested and genuinely works.
The Problem: YNAB Assumes Everyone Thinks the Same Way
Here's the uncomfortable reality many of us face:
YNAB's envelope system is brilliant for learning to budget. But once you've internalized the principles, the rigid structure can feel like a straitjacket. Every transaction must fit into a category. Every dollar must be assigned. Every month starts with the same ritual of moving money around.
Meanwhile, you've already built a productivity system you love:
- Your Notion workspace tracks everything else in your life
- Your Google Sheets have custom formulas you've perfected over years
- Your Airtable bases connect projects, clients, and workflows
- Your brain is trained to think in these tools
Adding YNAB means forcing your finances into someone else's mental model. It means context switching every time you want to check your budget. It means maintaining two separate systems for different parts of the same life.
"YNAB taught me how to budget. But once I learned, I realized I didn't need their system anymore - I just needed my data in a place where I could work with it."
The Alternative: Bank Data in Your Existing Tools
BankSync takes a fundamentally different approach. Instead of being another budgeting app with its own methodology, it's a data connector. It takes your bank transactions, account balances, and investment data and syncs them directly to the tools you already use:
Sync Your Bank Data To
Notion
Transactions appear as database entries. Build budgets with rollups, formulas, and views. Use Notion AI for auto-categorization. No envelopes required.
Google Sheets
Full spreadsheet power. Build pivot tables, charts, and custom formulas. Create your own budget methodology that fits how you think.
Airtable
Relational database features. Link transactions to projects, clients, or categories. Build automations and custom views.
You build the budget. You design the system. You decide what methodology works for your brain. BankSync just gets the data where you need it.
My Migration Story: Easier Than Expected
When I finally decided to switch, I was dreading the migration. Three years of YNAB data. Categories refined over countless hours. A system I knew intimately, even if it felt constraining.
Turns out I was overthinking it. Here's what I actually did:
- Exported my YNAB categories (just for reference - I ended up simplifying them significantly)
- Built my Notion budget template in about an hour using BankSync's starter template
- Connected my bank accounts through BankSync (same Plaid integration YNAB uses)
- Customized my categories to match how I actually think about spending (not YNAB's structure)
- Cancelled YNAB and immediately saved $8/month
The whole migration took a weekend afternoon. And honestly? My new system is better because I built it exactly how I think about money, not how YNAB thinks I should.
What I Built After Switching (My Actual Setup)
Here's exactly what my Notion finance system looks like after six months:
1. Transactions Database (Auto-Synced)
Every transaction from all my accounts automatically appears as a new entry. BankSync handles this completely - no manual entry required. Each transaction includes date, amount, merchant, account, and I use Notion AI to auto-categorize based on my history.
2. Monthly Spending Dashboard
A simple dashboard showing spending by category, budget vs actual, and progress bars. Unlike YNAB, I can see this alongside my goals, projects, and weekly review - all in one place.
3. Net Worth Tracker
BankSync syncs account balances too. I have a page showing total cash, investments, credit card debt, and net worth with month-over-month change. YNAB's net worth report was always an afterthought - now it's front and center.
4. Goals Integration
This is what YNAB could never do. Because my finances are in Notion, I can link savings goals to actual account balances, see how purchases affect my targets, tag transactions as related to specific projects, and create custom views for tax prep.
"I was a hardcore YNAB user for 4 years. The methodology is great, but I was spending 30 minutes a week just maintaining the system. With BankSync and Notion, my budget updates itself and I check it during my normal weekly review. Same awareness, way less friction."
Who Should Stick with YNAB
I'm not here to trash YNAB. It's genuinely excellent for certain people. You should probably stick with it if:
You're new to budgeting and need a proven system
The four rules genuinely work. If you've never budgeted before, YNAB's structure is invaluable.
You have debt you're actively paying off
YNAB's credit card handling is brilliant. It automatically sets aside money for credit card payments.
You don't use Notion, Airtable, or Google Sheets regularly
If you're not already living in these tools, there's no benefit to syncing data there.
You want a dedicated mobile app for quick transaction entry
YNAB's mobile apps are excellent for categorizing transactions on the go.
You love the envelope methodology and want to stick with it
If the system works for you as-is, no reason to change.
Who Should Switch to BankSync
BankSync is the better choice if:
You already live in Notion, Airtable, or Google Sheets
Your brain is trained to work in these tools. Adding finances there eliminates context switching.
You've outgrown YNAB's envelope system
You understand budgeting now - you just need the data, not the methodology.
You're tired of paying $15/month for rigid categories
BankSync is $7/month with unlimited flexibility to build what you want.
You want finances connected to your other life systems
Link transactions to projects, goals, or anything else in your workspace.
You prefer to build your own dashboards and views
Create exactly the budget visualization that works for your brain.
Frequently Asked Questions
The Bottom Line: Which Should You Choose?
Here's my honest take after using both for years:
YNAB is the better budgeting education platform. If you're new to budgeting, have debt, or want a proven system with built-in guidance, YNAB is excellent. The methodology genuinely works, and the community support is invaluable for beginners.
BankSync is the better choice once you've learned to budget. If you already live in Notion, use Google Sheets daily, or have built workflows in Airtable, BankSync lets you bring your finances into those tools instead of maintaining a separate system.
The best budget system isn't the prettiest or most feature-rich. It's the one you actually use consistently. For me, that meant graduating from YNAB's training wheels and building something that fits how I already work.
No credit card required. Cancel anytime. Your data stays in your tools even if you stop using BankSync.

