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.
Before you benchmark,
read what matters.
How Much Rent Can You Afford and Still Save Money?
A rent number is only affordable if it still leaves room for savings, surprises, and normal life. Here is a more useful way to decide before you sign the lease.
How Big Should Your Emergency Fund Actually Be?
“Save three to six months” sounds neat but it is too vague to be useful for most people. The right emergency fund depends on your fixed costs, income stability, support system, and how expensive your life would be if something went wrong.
The Simplest Monthly Budget for People Who Hate Budgeting
Detailed budgets fail because they ask people to manage money like a finance department. A simpler monthly budget works better: fixed costs, flexible spending, and future money. That is usually enough to stop the chaos without turning budgeting into a second job.
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