
FinancialAha
Financial planning spreadsheets that never see your data.
83 followers
Financial planning spreadsheets that never see your data.
83 followers
Budgeting apps want your bank login, charge you early, and vanish when they shut down -RIP Mint.
FinancialAha is different. Beautiful Google Sheets templates for financial planning where your data stays in your Google account and we never see it.
Pay a fair price once, and then use forever. No subscriptions. No data harvesting, with full control to customize everything.
For privacy-conscious people tired of giving apps their bank passwords, and spreadsheet lovers who want powerful templates.
This is the 7th launch from FinancialAha. View more
FinancialAha! Ultimate Spreadsheets
Launched this week
Plan your finances in a spreadsheet you fully control. FinancialAha Ultimate Spreadsheet templates are 58 advanced finance templates for Excel and Google Sheets. Net worth, retirement, FIRE, portfolios, rentals, freelance, debt payoff, business and more. Multi sheet dashboards, 100% formula driven, no macros. No subscription, one time. Your data stays on your device.




















































Free Options
Launch Team




Hey PH 👋
Launching FinancialAha Ultimate today, which is basically 58 finance spreadsheets that look beautiful and work for both Excel and Google Sheets.
I hit financial independence in my late twenties after my previous company got acquired, and I got kind of obsessed with knowing where I actually stood. Net worth, real savings rate, when I could realistically stop working. I tried the apps. Every one of them wanted my bank login, a monthly fee, and a copy of my finances sitting on someone's server. I never got comfortable with that, so I went back to spreadsheets and just kept building them out. Most templates are 6 or 7 sheets wired together with normal formulas, no macros, nothing fancy that breaks when Google or Microsoft change something.
Pricing is $19 per template, one time, and I'm probably never going to make it a subscription because charging monthly for a spreadsheet feels ridiculous to me. There's also a free version of every Ultimate template on the site, so you can poke around and see if the layout makes sense to you before spending anything.
Anyway, would genuinely love to hear from people who've tried other finance tools and bounced. Mint, Monarch, YNAB, Tiller, whatever. Mostly curious what made you give up on them.
Cheers!