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 ...
Peter is a writer and editor for the CNET How-To team. He has been covering technology, software, finance, sports and video games since working for @Home Network and Excite in the 1990s. Peter managed ...
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 ...
Mint, a budgeting app acquired by Intuit in 2009, is shutting down come January 1, 2024. Mint shows users an overview of their financial well-being by displaying the current status of multiple linked ...
This content has been selected, created and edited by the Finextra editorial team based upon its relevance and interest to our community. Budgeting app Mint will be killed off on 1 January, with users ...
The impending shutdown, which is set for Jan. 1, first surfaced in Reddit posts but Intuit has yet to notify many Mint users. Intuit announced this in an Oct. 31 post—a Halloween news dump that many ...
The very last holdouts will lose their access to Mint in a month. Mint was one of the very first budgeting apps out there, and its many devoted users were sent scrambling last year when parent company ...
Intuit, the financial software company, has decided to discontinue its widely used budgeting application, Mint. With 3.6 million active users in 2021, Mint has been a prominent tool for individuals ...
This article is reprinted by permission from NerdWallet. 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 ...
Intuit announced this week that it is sunsetting the personal financial management site Mint, which it bought in 2009 for $170 million. Younger readers may be asking themselves: What is Mint, and why ...
It’s September, and companies are shaking off their summer torpor, counting their remaining employees, and deciding that they have a bit of extra cash to buy up other companies. The latest news: ...
Digital products, despite their popularity, can also be discontinued. One such example is Mint, a personal finance application that has been helping users manage their money, budget, and pay bills ...