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The Hidden Cost of Free Finance Apps

Last updated: March 21, 2026

TLDR

Free finance apps generate revenue through three channels: financial product referrals (credit cards, mortgages, insurance), advisor upsells (Empower charges 0.89% AUM for wealth management), and data monetization (aggregated financial behavior is commercially valuable). Each of these creates an incentive that may or may not align with your financial interests. Paid subscription apps eliminate these conflicts — the only incentive is keeping you as a subscriber.

DEFINITION

AUM Fee (Assets Under Management)
An annual percentage of the total assets a financial advisor manages. Empower's wealth management service charges 0.89% AUM on the first $1 million. On $500,000, that's $4,450 per year, compounding as the portfolio grows. AUM fees are the primary revenue driver for Empower's business — the free tracking tools are customer acquisition for the advisory service.

DEFINITION

Lead Generation
The practice of using a free product to attract potential customers and then converting them to a paid service. Empower's free net worth tracker and retirement planner are lead generation tools for its advisory business. The tracking software is excellent; its purpose is to surface gaps that prompt advisory conversations.

DEFINITION

Affiliate Revenue
Commission paid to a platform when a user signs up for a financial product through the platform's link or recommendation. Credit card referrals generate $50-400+ per approved applicant depending on the card. Finance apps earn affiliate revenue on every product signup that originates from their platform.

The Revenue Model Shapes the Product

Every product decision in a finance app — what features to build, what screens to show, what to recommend, what to highlight — is shaped by how the company makes money. Understanding the revenue model tells you what the app is actually optimized for.

Empower (Formerly Personal Capital): AUM Upsell

Empower’s free product suite — net worth tracker, retirement planner, investment fee analyzer, cash flow tracker — is comprehensive and genuinely useful. It’s also the acquisition funnel for Empower’s wealth management advisory business, which charges 0.89% AUM for accounts up to $1 million.

The math on 0.89%: on a $500,000 portfolio, that’s $4,450 per year. The portfolio grows to $1M in approximately 10 years at 7% annual returns — by that point, the fee structure has cost roughly $47,000 in aggregate fees, plus the foregone compounding on that money.

Empower’s retirement planner is designed to surface advisory recommendations. The tool shows you “gaps” in your retirement preparation and then connects those gaps to advisory services. This is explicit in their business model — it’s not a criticism, it’s a description. Users should evaluate whether the advisory service’s cost is justified compared to alternatives before signing up.

Credit Card and Loan Referrals

Most free personal finance apps display credit card, loan, or insurance recommendations. These recommendations typically carry affiliate commissions — the app earns $50-400+ per approved applicant depending on the product.

This creates a straightforward conflict: the app has a financial reason to show you high-commission products prominently, and no financial reason to show you lower-commission products that might be better suited to your situation.

In most cases, these recommendations aren’t disclosed as affiliate-paid. They appear as editorial recommendations, rated by stars or presented as “best for” categories, with the commercial relationship invisible to users.

Data Monetization

Finance apps have unique insight into user financial behavior at scale. Aggregate data on spending categories, income levels, account balances, and financial behavior across millions of users is valuable for research, financial services marketing, and trend analysis.

Most free finance apps reserve the right to use this data in their terms of service. The specific terms vary — some are more restrictive than others, some explicitly state they don’t sell individually identifiable data. Reading the actual privacy policy (not just the app’s marketing summary) tells you what you’ve consented to.

The Dollar Cost

The aggregate cost of decisions influenced by conflicted recommendations is hard to calculate precisely, but the orders of magnitude are clear:

  • A credit card with a $95 annual fee kept open because the app recommended it: $950 over 10 years if you wouldn’t have chosen it otherwise
  • An Empower advisory relationship on a $300,000 portfolio at 0.89%: $2,670/year, or $26,700 over 10 years at a growing portfolio
  • An insurance product with embedded commissions recommended through an app: potentially hundreds to thousands in unnecessary premiums

Against these potential costs, $9-15/month for a subscription app with no referral incentives — roughly $108-180/year — is not a significant expense. The subscription fee is visible and certain; the costs of conflicted recommendations are invisible and variable but potentially much larger.

This is the actual economic argument for paid finance apps: not that $9/month is cheap in isolation, but that the alternative costs embedded in free apps can be far more expensive than the subscription.

Q&A

How much does Empower's AUM fee cost over time?

On a $500,000 portfolio, Empower's 0.89% AUM fee is $4,450 per year. At 7% annual growth, that portfolio reaches $1 million in about 10 years — at which point the fee (now tiered, but still substantial) has cost roughly $47,000 over the decade. The compound impact is larger still because you're effectively paying fees on money that would have been compounding. Compare: a flat subscription finance app at $9/month ($108/year) costs approximately $1,080 over the same 10 years.

Q&A

How do credit card affiliate programs work in finance apps?

Finance apps that display credit card recommendations typically earn a referral fee when you click through and are approved. These fees range from $50 to $400+ depending on the card issuer's affiliate program. The app has a financial incentive to show you cards with high referral payouts, regardless of whether those cards are the best fit for your spending patterns. Most apps don't disclose which recommendations are affiliate-paid — they're presented as editorial recommendations.

Q&A

What do free finance apps do with your financial data?

Varies by app. Most free finance apps retain the right to use aggregated, anonymized user data for research, marketing, and product improvement. Some sell or share aggregate insights with third parties. Your spending categories, income level, account balances, and financial behavior form a commercially valuable profile. Privacy policies specify what's permitted — reading the actual policy (not just the summary) tells you what you've consented to.

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Want to learn more?

Is Empower's free net worth tracker still worth using even with the advisory upsell?
Empower's free tools are genuinely good — the net worth tracker, retirement planner, and investment fee analyzer provide real value. The issue isn't that the tools are bad; it's that users should understand the business model. If you use Empower's free tools, be aware that the retirement planner is designed to surface advisory recommendations, and evaluate any wealth management pitch on its merits versus alternatives (fee-only advisors, Vanguard's advisory service, self-directed investing) rather than defaulting to it.
How do I find out what a finance app does with my data?
Read the privacy policy, specifically the sections on 'how we use your information' and 'sharing with third parties.' Key questions: Does the app sell or share data with third parties for their own marketing purposes? Does it use your financial data to target you with financial product ads? Does it aggregate your data for commercial research products? Apps that sell or share data for third-party marketing are the most problematic. Most reputable paid apps explicitly state they don't sell user data.
What does 'data monetization' mean in practice for personal finance apps?
At the aggregate level, finance apps have visibility into spending patterns across millions of users — valuable for financial research, trend analysis, and marketing targeting. A lender knowing that people with your financial profile often respond to certain offers is commercially valuable. At the individual level, targeted financial product recommendations based on your account data can steer you toward products that benefit the platform. This isn't necessarily fraudulent, but it creates incentives worth understanding.
Are there truly free personal finance tools with no monetization conflicts?
Your bank's own app shows your transactions without monetization conflicts — it already has your business. Credit union apps are similar. Spreadsheet-based tracking has no third-party incentives at all. But these options sacrifice the aggregation benefit: they show only their own accounts, not your complete picture. The trade-off is real: free tools with full aggregation almost always have some monetization mechanism; fully conflict-free tools typically don't aggregate across all accounts.

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