Stop guessing if
you're doing okay.
The internet averages 335 million strangers together and calls it a benchmark. We compare you to people your age, in your city, at your career stage — the only peer group that means anything.
Four steps,
ninety seconds.
The survey is deliberately short. Nuance comes from matching, not interrogation.
Your “average” is a statistical fiction.
The articles telling you the “average American saves 5%” are lumping together 22-year-olds and 55-year-olds, Manhattan and rural Kansas, founders and cashiers. It's the worst kind of benchmark — specific enough to worry about, useless enough to ignore.
4,595 people like you,
somewhere right now.
Every dot a peer. Every ping a fresh comparison being calculated.
We never see
your actual numbers.
You pick ranges from a menu. No login to your bank. No linked accounts. No scraping your statements. Your real numbers never leave your browser.
“Finally” — the most common word in our inbox.
Find out where
you actually stand.
$1.99. Ninety seconds. Lifetime access to your comparison.
Start comparing