YourFinancePal
Personal-finance copilot with proactive nudges — not a pretty dashboard.

Users & fit
Persona
25–45 earners in the $50k–$200k bracket. Tech-comfortable; burned by Mint (shut down Dec 2023/Jan 2024). Bank via 2–4 institutions + credit cards + Stripe/PayPal + a 401k. Want proactive management, not another pie chart.
Problem
PFM dashboards are passive. They show that you spent $140 on DoorDash this month; they don't switch your auto-renewing $18 subscription to a $9 competitor before the charge posts. The gap between "insight" and "action" is where Mint died and where the category is replayable.
Urgency
Mint shutdown (Jan 2024) left ~3.6M active users looking for alternatives. Rocket Money, Copilot, and Monarch Money grew 2–3× in 12 months. CFPB finalized the 2024 Personal Financial Data Access Rule — third-party access to banking data becomes standardized in 2025–2026.
Frequency
Daily for active users (budget check, notification response); weekly for low-touch plans. Proactive nudges drive engagement.
Figures marked (verify) or (estimated) come from training-data benchmarks; re-verify against live reports before external use.
Market
TAM
$5.4B global personal-finance app market 2024 (Allied Market Research 2024, verify); US subset $2.1B
SAM
$980M — US + Canada + UK + AU tech-native earners paying for PFM-category apps
SOM (3-yr)
$28–$48M ARR in 3 yrs — 350k–550k paying users at $95 ARPU
Revenue model
Subscription + optional bill-negotiation take-rate (30–40% of savings achieved, standard category economics). No ads, no data-monetization.
Pricing
$9.99/mo or $69/yr Pro (unlimited accounts + nudges + bill negotiation). Comps: Rocket Money $4–$12/mo, Copilot $13.99/mo, Monarch Money $14.99/mo, YNAB $14.99/mo.
ARPU
Y1 ~$58; Y2 ~$82 with bill-negotiation kicker
Landscape
Competitors
- Rocket Money
5M+ users (verify); subscription cancellation + bill negotiation leader. Feature-rich, UX aging.
- Copilot Money
~$15M ARR; premium Mac/iOS design-forward PFM. Passive dashboard.
- Monarch Money
Post-Mint replacement; strong aggregation. No nudges or auto-action.
- YNAB
Zero-based budgeting; cult following; $14.99/mo. Philosophy-first, not automation-first.
- Empower (formerly Personal Capital)
Investment-tracker + wealth advisory. Hybrid model, free.
Our wedge
Proactive nudges + pre-charge intervention. Detect auto-renewal → propose switch 48hr before charge → tap to cancel-and-sign-up-alternative. No competitor does pre-action intervention; they're all post-hoc analytics.
Moat
Bank-data-aggregation layer (Plaid / Finicity / MX) + alternative-provider database + user-preference model compound per customer. Trust + habit lock-in is real in PFM (users migrate once every 5 years on average).
Sources
- Allied Market Research — Personal Finance Software Market 2024
- CFPB — Personal Financial Data Rights Final Rule (Oct 2024)
- Rocket Money (formerly Truebill) — reported 5M+ users after Rocket acquisition (verify)
- Copilot Money — indie PFM, ~$15M ARR (verify)
- Monarch Money — post-Mint replacement, Series A 2023
Figures marked (verify) or (estimated) come from training-data benchmarks; re-verify against live reports before external use.
Current state
Stage
IdeationM1
Alpha — 200 users, Plaid + Copilot-quality aggregation + first 3 nudge types.
M3
Public launch; bill-negotiation workflow; 10k paying users.
M6
CFPB 1033-compliant direct-bank connections; 40k users, ARR $3M.
CAC
$30–$80 via YouTube personal-finance creator sponsorships + Reddit r/personalfinance organic; paid Meta $70–$140 (estimated)
LTV
$140–$320 (3–5 yr life; PFM is sticky once auto-nudges activate)
Payback
5–10 months
Risk surface
Risks
- Plaid / Finicity aggregation cost (~$0.30–$1.50 per active user/month) compresses margin at free-tier scale.
- Rocket Money / Copilot add proactive-nudge features — category convergence.
- CFPB 1033 rule implementation uncertainty; aggregator costs could spike or drop sharply.
- If we move money (vs just observe): money-transmitter licensing is state-by-state and expensive.
- Bank-data breach is a category-killing event; security spend is a non-negotiable line item.
Regulatory
- CFPB Personal Financial Data Rights Final Rule (Oct 2024): bank-data-aggregation standards + consumer-authorization requirements.
- GLBA Safeguards Rule (FTC, updated 2023): financial-data security standards — encryption, access controls, annual audits.
- State money-transmitter licensing IF we move funds (vs observe-only) — 49-state patchwork.
- Reg E (EFT consumer protections) if providing account services.
- SOC 2 Type II + PCI-DSS for card-on-file features — mandatory for investor due-diligence.
Figures marked (verify) or (estimated) come from training-data benchmarks; re-verify against live reports before external use.