Intuit, Makers of Quicken, Buys Mint.com

My Money Blog has partnered with CardRatings and may receive a commission from card issuers. Some or all of the card offers that appear on this site are from advertisers and may impact how and where card products appear on the site. MyMoneyBlog.com does not include all card companies or all available card offers. All opinions expressed are the author’s alone.

Yesterday, Mint.com announced that they were acquired by Intuit for $170 million. Not too shabby. Intuit is best known for personal finance products such as Quickbooks, Quicken, and TurboTax. They also released Quicken Online last year, which was basically a direct competitor to Mint.com. Both aggregate your spending and income by automatically accessing the data your financial websites, and analyze your habits for you. However, according to their press release, Intuit intends to keep both of the them separate:

Intuit intends to keep both the Mint.com and Quicken Online offerings, with each serving separate and equally important purposes. Mint.com will become the primary online personal finance management service that is offered directly to consumers by Intuit. Quicken Online will connect Quicken customers across desktop, online and mobile to deliver easy, anytime-anywhere access. This will help accelerate Intuit’s ability to create products and services that make managing money easier for all Intuit customers.

One of the benefits of this deal seems to be that concerns about data safety might be alleviated. Millions of people trust Intuit with their tax returns, which are probably some of the most sensitive data out there, so they might be more comfortable with sharing their financial website passwords with Intuit.

On the other hand, the competition between Quicken Online and Mint.com probably inspired some extra features and also made sure that both services remained free. According to WalletPop, there are “no plans” to charge for either of these services for now. Both sites have improved a lot recently, I just hope that continues.

My Money Blog has partnered with CardRatings and may receive a commission from card issuers. Some or all of the card offers that appear on this site are from advertisers and may impact how and where card products appear on the site. MyMoneyBlog.com does not include all card companies or all available card offers. All opinions expressed are the author’s alone, and has not been provided nor approved by any of the companies mentioned.

MyMoneyBlog.com is also a member of the Amazon Associate Program, and if you click through to Amazon and make a purchase, I may earn a small commission. Thank you for your support.


User Generated Content Disclosure: Comments and/or responses are not provided or commissioned by any advertiser. Comments and/or responses have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any advertiser. It is not any advertiser's responsibility to ensure all posts and/or questions are answered.

Comments

  1. Yodlee still wins my vote; I tried mint, didn’t like it.

  2. Same here. Tried Mint, preferred Yodlee. Never closed my Mint account though. Did after I heard about this. 🙂

  3. This is absolutely terrible. I use QuickBooks nearly everyday and that product and support, frankly, sucks. Intuit has the “let early purchasers beta test this for us” down to an art form, and it’ll only be a matter of time before that mindset spreads to Mint.
    I’m not really sure if I’d recommend Mint to clients now that it’s owned by Intuit. I’ve recommended Mint in the past, but I really have to wait and see how this goes.
    Having said all that, Intuit should be able to somehow integrate Mint into Turbotax, which will be pretty slick (no more shoebox accounting for a lot of folks). But I think the days of Mint improving rapidly are over.

  4. Intuit is horrible… they just killed some core functionality for quickbooks which was working just fine just so they could force me to upgrade.

    The new quickbooks is just like one giant advertisement for other products they offer (payroll, etc.) I never thought I’d need a pop up blocker in a program I actually paid for.

  5. I’ve tried Mint & hated it. My gripe is that (at the time) you can’t manually input transactions. I didn’t make it much further into the software.

    Now, I use QuickenOnline. I hate it too; specifically, I hate the handling of recurring transaction. At this point, I feel quickenonline is the lesser of the evils.

    I’m not sure how this news makes me feel…

  6. I am a regular and very avid user/supporter of Mint. I must admit: I’m a little scared right now. I hope the Mint I’ve come to know and love doesn’t change for the worse now.

  7. Intuit is taking over the financial world! They bumped out MSMoney and now bought Mint, which I have never tried. Jonathan turned me on to Yodlee years ago and never seemed worthwhile to do the whole setup again in Mint. Even farther back when Intuit tried to force me to upgrade Quicken with their ‘sunset policy’ I dumped them and bought a license for MoneyDance after trying it, which I still use today with no regrets and free upgrades and everthing works. I am a big fan of MoneyDance and Sean Reilly.

  8. 0 to $170 million in 2 years. Impressive.

    I think Mint will stay free into the future.

  9. Kantoorpand / Bedrijfspand huren says

    I am a regular and very avid user/supporter of Mint. I must admit: I’m a little scared right now. I hope the Mint I’ve come to know and love doesn’t change for the worse now.

    I don’t think this is going to happen!!

  10. Hmm, hopefully Mint stays cool.
    I haven’t liked some of their recent changes, but overall it’s useful and easy to use.
    I like the new ability to roll over budgets each month! 🙂

  11. I have the Quickbooks 2009…had to call customer service to get the software registered…was on the call for 1 hour and 31 minutes…over an hour on hold because I refuse to give a credit card number for the so called service plan…I asked the non English speaking rep to transfer me to a supervisor…she refused…out right refused…thank god there are other programs out there that do what Quickbooks does…you are completely correct….Intuit SUCKS…

  12. Robert C. says

    I had to change my personal and business accounts from MSMoney (terminating support) to Quicken. Did so as of 3/1/2010. It has been a non-stop nightmare. I am trying to get rid of these mental Lilliputians and scouting around for any competitors.

  13. To Whom It May Concern,

    I had a problem with my QuickBooks and sent several complaints which were never answered, so I doubt that this one will be either.

    Actually, my wife figured out how to remove the link that was showing up for ‘Payment Network’ and that fixed it. She got her answer from the QuickBooks community and not from Intuit. In fact, that is one of the biggest complaints I have about Intuit, being that there is a lack of customer support unless you pay for it.

    I tried to get the answer from one of your customer service people and was very disappointed in the service that I got. He wouldn’t connect me to his supervisor and when I asked if there was some way to identify him to file a complaint, he told me that there was not. And then told me that he could not help me unless I was to pay $20 and process at least $ 20 per month through intuit. He refused to help me and cut the call short. I didn’t think that it was right to include this link that basicly sells a product that Intuit offers and all I wanted to know was how to remove it. He told me that it was part of the software and could not be removed.

    I have a lot of time and energy invested in Quickbooks with inventory control and pricing and quotes and invoices and keeping track of customers and a lot of customizing and wish I would have known ahead of time that I was going to be hit with commercials every time I did something on the program. I would have chosen Peachtree or another program.

    I am wasting my time trying to get through to someone when I know you don’t really care. Perhaps it is better for me to vent my frustrations through a blog space dedicated to QuickBooks and see how many others feel this way.

    Maybe this way I could save others from the frustrations that I have had using QuickBooks.

    Thanks if you are still reading,

    Gary Usinger

Leave a Reply to Maury Cancel reply

*