Most people aren't bad with money — they just never had a clear picture of where it actually goes. Early Edge gives you that picture in minutes, for free, and keeps it live as your finances change.

Three steps from scattered numbers to a live money system.
Enter your income, bills, and spending in about 3 minutes — no bank linking required.
See your full money system built instantly — safe-to-spend, retirement, emergency fund, and goals.
Track your plan live every day, with the Early Bird AI watching the numbers alongside you.
One simple app that replaces the spreadsheet, the guesswork, and the anxiety.

Your personal financial coach, available 24/7 — it reads your real numbers.
See your full monthly money system built instantly the moment you finish your snapshot.
Live tracking of your spending and savings every day, so nothing slips by.
Set savings goals and watch them grow with a clear date you'll reach each one.
Roth IRA calculator and 401(k) tracking against the 10–15% benchmark.
Add assets and liabilities to see your full financial picture in one place.
Step-by-step financial strategies in plain language for every money decision.
A Learn section with real concepts explained in plain, jargon-free language.
Most of Early Edge is free forever. Premium adds the live, day-to-day layer.
Early Edge is a personal finance tool that turns your income, bills, and spending into a clear monthly plan — your safe-to-spend, retirement, emergency fund, goals, and net worth — and keeps it live as your finances change, with guidance from the Early Bird AI.
Yes. Your data is encrypted in transit and at rest, stored securely, and never sold or shared for advertising. You can request deletion at any time.
The Early Bird is your built-in financial coach. It reads your actual numbers and answers questions about your plan, retirement, goals, and spending — in plain language, on demand.
Absolutely. Cancel any time before your 30-day free trial ends and you won't be charged. After that it's $4.99/month, cancel whenever you like — no penalties.
No. Everything works with numbers you enter yourself. Bank linking (via Plaid) is an optional feature coming later — never required.
Join in minutes. Your first 30 days are free.
The Smart Way to Manage Your Money. Build Your Plan, Track What Matters, Learn What Works — Do It Early, Before It's Too Late.
Enter your income, essentials, subscriptions, and spending categories to build your financial picture.
We turn it into a clear monthly path to success — essentials, retirement, goals, and lifestyle all in order.
Readable progress reports: what’s paid, what’s left, and what to do next.
Simple, readable, and not overwhelming.
Jump to what you need.
Start with take-home pay. Use the amount that actually lands in your account after taxes and deductions.
💡 Round to the nearest dollar — no need for cents.
These are your core monthly obligations. Enter the bills that have to be covered before lifestyle spending.
Enter what you usually spend in these categories, even if you swipe a credit card. This helps show spending patterns clearly without overwhelming the plan.
Add the recurring charges you want to keep visible. This can be streaming, fitness, apps, memberships, or anything else recurring.
💡 Tip: Type a subscription name to search the list, or scroll through suggestions that appear. Start typing “Net” to find Netflix, “Spo” for Spotify, etc.
| Name | Monthly $ | Action |
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Separate liquid savings from retirement so the plan can show emergency fund progress and long-term investing more accurately.
These balances are tracked and shown on your Plan page so you can watch them grow over time.
Open this if retirement money is automatically deducted from your paycheck — like a 401(k) or TSP contribution.
Add contributions you make directly — outside of payroll deductions.
Anything that isn't a retirement account — brokerage / stock holdings, crypto, and other long-term assets. These roll into your Plan-page total but stay listed separately.
An emergency fund is money set aside for unexpected costs: car repairs, medical bills, job gaps, travel for family emergencies, etc. A common goal is 3 months of essentials (rent + bills + minimum debt + subscriptions). You can choose to include or skip it based on your situation.
Auto-saves locally. Finish & Generate now also saves your Snapshot to your account when you are signed in.
Your money organized into clear priorities — essentials first, then retirement, emergency savings, and goals. See where you stand and what to focus on next.
🏠 Essentials
💚 Safe-to-Spend
🛡️ Emergency Fund
📈 Retirement
📱 Subscriptions
🎯 Goals
Net worth = what you own (assets) − what you owe (liabilities). Update once a month.
Assets are things you own that have value. Common examples:
Tip: for home/car, you can use a conservative estimate (e.g., recent sale value or online estimate).
Liabilities are debts you owe. Common examples:
Assets: $10,000 cash + $5,000 investments + $20,000 car value = $35,000
Liabilities: $2,000 credit card + $8,000 car loan = $10,000
Net worth = $35,000 − $10,000 = $25,000
Model your contributions and see a retirement projection. Then read the rules, where to open one, and how Roth compares to other accounts.
Project your Roth IRA growth based on your current balance, monthly contributions, expected return rate, and retirement age. See how your money compounds over time.
Keep the calculator visible on the left, and open any topic below when you want to read more.
A Roth IRA is a retirement account funded with money you have already paid taxes on. If you follow the rules, qualified withdrawals in retirement can be tax-free.
Rules change over time, so this section should stay high level for now.
Roth rules are easy to misunderstand, so this section should stay simple and readable.
Keep this as education only for now, not a substitute for checking the exact rules before taking money out.
Most people open Roth IRAs at major brokerages or robo-advisors because they are simple to automate and usually low cost.
Common examples people often look at include Fidelity, Charles Schwab, Vanguard, T. Rowe Price, and robo-advisors like Betterment or Wealthfront.
A good rule is to look for low fees, easy recurring contributions, and an interface you will actually keep using.
These are examples of commonly used platforms. Early Edge is not affiliated with them unless clearly stated otherwise.
Your assumed annual return is a planning estimate, not a promise. It is there to model possibilities, not guarantee outcomes.
Use this section to track what you want to build toward in the future. Common examples include a car or vehicle, a house or property, a boat, travel, a larger emergency cushion, or another major purchase. Clear goals give your monthly decisions a purpose.
Goals give your monthly decisions a direction. Without them, extra money tends to disappear into random spending.
Practical explanations for the financial topics many people were never clearly taught: how credit works, how financing works, where to keep savings, how investing compounds, and how to think through everyday money decisions with more confidence.
Hey, it's the Early Bird. 🐦 When you link a bank account, I connect securely through Plaid — a trusted service thousands of finance apps use — and read your transactions so I can match your real spending against your plan. I never see or store your bank login, and your data stays private to you.
Checking and credit cards show different things:
Why connect both? If I only see checking, I see one $600 "payment to Chase" instead of the dozens of small purchases that added up to it — so I can't tell you where your money really went. Connect both and you get the full picture: checking for your fixed costs, credit cards for your everyday spending.
Won't that double-count my credit card payment? Nope — I've got you covered. When I spot a payment from checking to a credit card (like "Payment to Amex"), I automatically mark it as a planned expense and leave it out of your discretionary spending. That way your card purchases count once on the card, and the payment that covers them isn't counted again. If I'm ever unsure, I'll just ask you with a quick yes-or-no.
How to connect more than one account: On the Progress page, tap Connect Bank Account to link your first one. Once it's connected, a + Connect another account button appears — use it to add your credit cards and any other accounts. Link as many as you like; I'll keep them all in sync.
The more I can see, the better I can guide you. 💪
An emergency fund is liquid money — cash or cash-like savings you can access quickly without selling investments or going into debt. It covers surprises like car repairs, medical bills, urgent travel, a gap in income, or a broken appliance.
A common target is 3 to 6 months of essential expenses. But if you are starting from zero, even $500 to $1,000 makes a real difference. That small buffer is often what separates a manageable surprise from a credit card spiral.
Keep your emergency fund in a high-yield savings account — somewhere accessible but separate from your everyday spending account. Out of sight, but not locked away. The goal is stability, not growth.
Rule of thumb: Build your emergency fund before accelerating retirement contributions beyond any employer match. It is the foundation everything else rests on.
Credit is borrowed money. A credit card is a tool — useful when used intentionally, expensive when balances roll month to month and interest compounds.
Used well, credit cards offer: fraud protection, purchase insurance, rewards (cash back, travel points), and credit history building. The safest habit is paying the full statement balance every month, which means you pay zero interest.
The danger zone: Carrying a balance. Most cards charge 20–30% APR. A $1,000 balance paying only minimums can take years to pay off and cost hundreds in interest. The minimum payment is designed to keep you in debt as long as possible.
Credit scores (300–850) matter because they affect: apartment approvals, auto loan rates, mortgage rates, and insurance pricing in some states. The biggest factors are payment history (pay on time, always) and credit utilization (keep balances below 30% of your limit, ideally below 10%).
Building credit from scratch: A secured credit card, a credit-builder loan, or being added as an authorized user on a trusted family member's account are common starting points. Time and consistency matter — older accounts with clean history strengthen your score over time.
Not all savings accounts are equal. A traditional savings account at a big bank might earn almost nothing. A high-yield savings account (HYSA) at an online bank can earn significantly more — often 4–5% or higher depending on the rate environment.
A simple framework for organizing cash:
Popular high-yield savings options include Marcus by Goldman Sachs, Ally Bank, SoFi, and Discover. Rates change over time so it is worth comparing when you open one.
CDs (Certificates of Deposit) offer higher rates in exchange for locking up money for a set period — 3 months to 5 years. Useful for money you know you will not need but want earning more than a standard savings account.
Investing is putting money to work so it can grow over time instead of sitting still and losing value to inflation. The earlier you start, the more time compounding has to work in your favor.
Key concepts:
The big idea: Time in the market beats timing the market. Consistent contributions — even small ones — over a long period outperform trying to perfectly predict highs and lows. Diversification and patience matter more than picking the right stock.
Where to start: Max your Roth IRA first if eligible, then contribute to your 401(k) up to at least the employer match, then consider a taxable brokerage account for money beyond those limits.
Taxes reduce your take-home pay and affect how different accounts work. Understanding the basics helps you make smarter decisions without needing an accountant for everything.
Marginal vs. effective tax rate: You do not pay your top rate on all income. The US uses a bracket system — only income above each threshold gets taxed at the higher rate. Your effective rate (what you actually pay overall) is almost always lower than your marginal rate.
Pre-tax vs. after-tax accounts:
General rule: If you expect to be in a higher tax bracket in retirement, Roth tends to win. If you expect lower income later, traditional may be better. When uncertain, splitting between both is a reasonable approach.
W-4 and withholding: A large refund means you overpaid all year — an interest-free loan to the government. Adjusting your withholding so you break even keeps more money in your paycheck monthly where it can work for you.
Insurance is not exciting, but it is one of the most important parts of a financial plan. One uninsured event — a car accident, a medical emergency, a disability — can wipe out years of savings.
Types to understand:
Early Edge is not affiliated with any specific insurance provider. Rates and availability vary by location and situation.
Many people qualify for real savings they never use. These are not coupons — they are meaningful reductions on things you are already paying for.
Military and veteran discounts: Available at thousands of retailers, restaurants, travel providers, and service companies. USAA offers banking, insurance, and investing. ID.me and GovX verify status and unlock discounts across many brands. Many software companies offer free or heavily discounted products for active duty and veterans.
Student discounts: Amazon Prime Student at half price, Spotify and Apple Music student plans, and software like Notion, Figma, and Adobe Creative Cloud free or deeply discounted. Many banks waive fees for students. Always ask before paying full price.
Employer benefits often missed: FSA and HSA contributions (pre-tax dollars for medical expenses), commuter benefits, tuition reimbursement, employee stock purchase plans, legal and financial wellness programs, and gym reimbursements. Many people leave thousands of dollars in these benefits unused every year.
Subscription audit: Most people are paying for at least one service they forgot about or stopped using. A quick review of your bank and credit card statements every few months can uncover $20–$100 or more per month in forgotten subscriptions.
Early Edge is not affiliated with these platforms unless clearly stated. Always verify current offers directly with the provider.
Most financial problems are not math problems. They are behavior problems. Understanding the patterns that pull spending off track is often more valuable than any spreadsheet.
Lifestyle creep: As income grows, spending tends to grow with it — silently. A raise disappears into a nicer apartment, a newer car, and more dining out before it ever reaches savings. Intentionally directing income increases toward goals before adjusting lifestyle is one of the highest-leverage habits in personal finance.
Impulse spending: Most impulse purchases feel like decisions but are actually reactions — to stress, boredom, or just proximity to something appealing. A simple rule: wait 24–48 hours before buying anything unplanned over a set amount. Most impulses do not survive a night's sleep.
Sunk cost thinking: Continuing a subscription, gym membership, or investment because you already paid for it is a sunk cost trap. Past spending is gone. The only question is whether continuing makes sense going forward.
Social spending pressure: Keeping up with friends, attending events you cannot afford, or buying things to signal status quietly destroys financial progress. The people who actually build wealth are often the ones who care least about appearing wealthy.
The goal is awareness, not perfection. You do not need to eliminate enjoyment from your spending. You just need to know where your money goes so you can make conscious choices instead of wondering every month where it went.
Social Security benefits are taxed at the federal level for some retirees, but state-level treatment varies dramatically. Most states don't tax Social Security at all — but a handful still do, and the rules change frequently as states phase exemptions in or out.
States that fully exempt Social Security: The large majority — including California, Florida, Texas, New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Ohio, Georgia, Arizona, North Carolina, and most others. If your state isn't in the next list, it almost certainly doesn't tax Social Security.
States that may tax some Social Security (recent years): Colorado, Connecticut, Kansas, Minnesota, Montana, New Mexico, Rhode Island, Utah, Vermont, and West Virginia (phasing out). Most of these states apply income thresholds — lower-income retirees often pay no state tax on benefits even in these states.
Why it matters: When choosing where to retire — or planning withdrawals where you already live — state Social Security taxation can swing real take-home retirement income by hundreds or even a few thousand dollars per year. It's also a moving target: Missouri and Nebraska have dropped their Social Security tax in recent years.
State rules change frequently. Verify current treatment with your state's Department of Revenue or a tax professional before making retirement decisions.
Beyond Social Security, states differ widely in how they tax withdrawals from retirement accounts and pension income. Where you live in retirement directly affects how much of your nest egg you actually keep.
No state income tax at all: Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire (only taxes interest/dividends, phasing out), South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, and Wyoming. In these states, 401(k)/IRA withdrawals and most pensions aren't taxed at the state level.
Broad retirement income exemptions: Illinois, Mississippi, and Pennsylvania exempt most qualified 401(k), IRA, and pension income regardless of age. Iowa exempts all retirement income for residents 55+.
Partial or age-based exemptions: Many states (Georgia, New York, Maryland, Michigan, Kentucky, South Carolina, and others) exempt a portion of retirement income above a certain age, or up to a dollar cap. Some states exempt public pensions but tax private ones — common for retired teachers, police, and government workers.
States that fully tax retirement income: California, Connecticut, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, Rhode Island, and Vermont tax most retirement income as ordinary income, with limited exemptions.
Roth withdrawals: Because Roth contributions were already taxed, qualified Roth IRA and Roth 401(k) withdrawals are generally not taxed at the state level either. A few states have unusual rules, so verify locally before relying on this in retirement planning.
State tax rules are complex and change frequently. Always verify with your state's Department of Revenue and consider speaking with a tax professional when planning retirement withdrawals.
Your financial control panel — updated live by the Early Bird. Start with your Current Status, follow the Early Bird Guidance, then take the Next Best Action. The right column tracks your long-term signals.
Check your status first, then your weekly guidance, then your next best action.
Start with Current Status, Weekly Check, and Next Best Action. Those tell you what to focus on right now.
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