Intuit purchased Mint in 2009, and it held in its hands one of the best personal finance apps of its generation. The app would continue on for 15 years before Intuit decided to shutter it in March ...
Mint, acquired by Intuit in 2009, is a free personal finance app. It has long been one of the most widely used and highly rated budget apps. Mint links to nearly all types of users’ financial accounts ...
Brooke Enloe is a former banking editor at Forbes Advisor. She is an editor and writer, passionate about producing enlightening content for readers. Her articles are about recent banking news, ...
Mint, a free, highly popular personal finance app, is shutting down, its parent company Intuit announced this week. Mint is known for its features that help users with their budgeting, including ...
The Mint budgeting app officially shut down on March 23, 2024, and users can no longer access their data on the app. Intuit®, which owns Mint and other personal finance platforms like QuickBooks® and ...
Come Jan. 1, 2024, users of the Mint app from Intuit will have to find a new way to manage their money since Mint is merging with Credit Karma. “Credit Karma is thrilled to invite all Minters to ...
Now that Intuit is discontinuing its personal finance app Mint in January, some startups say they are already seeing a bump in new customers. One of these is Monarch Money, a subscription-based money ...
Intuit is shutting down its free budgeting app Mint, which had 3.6 million active users in 2021, Bloomberg reports. The company will absorb users into its other service called Credit Karma when Mint ...
Intuit, which acquired Mint in 2009, is encouraging users to switch to Credit Karma, its money management and credit score service. By Jenny Gross Mint, one of the earliest and most popular personal ...
Intuit Inc. announced this week that it will shut down Mint on Jan. 1, 2024. The company’s decision to discontinue the popular budgeting app could leave millions of users scrambling to find a ...