1

I wonder if someone uses any personal finance manager on Ubuntu. I track my income and expenses in LibreOffice Calc and it works fine because I have set up everything I need the way I like. The issue now is that after a few years the file has become a bit slow to manage, so I am thinking that I probably need some specialised software to do it. Basically I need to add my expenses by category, track a few bank accounts and be able to pull stat on my expenses plus have a budget to make sure that I do not overspend.

I remember that I had tried GnuCash before and found it too complex. I'm not sure if I tried anything else. I also tried to do things on my phone. There are a few finance managers available, but I never liked them. I need something simple enough to be easy to set up, but also flexible to set it up the way I like.

6
  • I use Money Manager Ex which is downloadable from Ubuntu Software moneymanagerex.org Its available as a snap or Flatpak.
    – graham
    Commented Jan 6 at 16:01
  • You mentioned that the file has become slow...by any chance are you using the LibreOffice snap version? I found the LibreOffice snap very laggy and slow in its operation, while the deb and Flatpak versions worked just fine. Commented Jan 6 at 16:27
  • I used Quicken from DOS days until I stopped using XP. I also tried GnuCash. But found Kmymoney worked for me. Its not Quicken but good enough. But I run report at year end & copy some data into spreadsheet for transactions I do not post in Kmymoney. Mostly my credit card info, as detail would be too much, so just post payments in spreadsheet. I download QFX files from bank to import to Kmymoney. But have to run dos2unix to convert from Windows format.
    – oldfred
    Commented Jan 6 at 18:40
  • I use MoneyDance. It is not open source nor free, but it works for me
    – user68186
    Commented Jan 7 at 4:28
  • I use a DEB version of LibreOffice. Currently, the file has 14,500 entries in transactions and another 3,000 in money transfers. They all are used in 2 or 3 summary files. I think it is what makes it slow.
    – foxy123
    Commented Jan 8 at 12:02

1 Answer 1

1

GnuCash isn't complex. It's just different. Double-entry accounting is not at all hard to learn, but you have to think about your money in a more realistic way. It comes from somewhere, you store it somewhere, you send it somewhere.

I used Quicken when I was on DOS and OS/2, and switched to GnuCash when I switched to Linux. So I've used both methods. The only difficult part of the transition was importing my accounts. (This was maybe fifteen years ago, and lots of development has taken place since then.) What I did was start over; I kept my QIF exports in case I needed them for something, but I opened a new set of books for GnuCash.

It's January. Start anew with your record-keeping. There are YouTube tutorials on double-entry accounting and the GnuCash wiki and the mailing list are very helpful.

3
  • Double accounting is not an issue for me, I know how it works very well. It's more user-friendliness I referred to in the case of GnuCash. I always considered it a professional accounting software rather than a personal finance manager.
    – foxy123
    Commented Jan 8 at 11:58
  • @foxy123 I've no idea how long ago you tried it, but it seems very user-friendly to me now. I did have a fit with it when I first tried it long ago. The only thing I wish were different about it is the reporting. It's done in Scheme. But I don't have a better alternative, so I stay out of it. I guess I wish it were prettier, too.
    – MDeBusk
    Commented Jan 8 at 21:04
  • Thanks a lot. I will give it a try!
    – foxy123
    Commented Jan 10 at 11:54

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .