Calculators Blog Guides Compare Canada Find Your Score

Unburden vs Mint: which debt app wins in 2026?

TL;DR

Unburden is built for debt payoff. Mint is built for automated budget tracking. Both can touch debt, but they optimize for different jobs. This page lays out where each wins and how to pick.

At a glance

DimensionUnburdenMint
Monthly costFree, Pro $6.45/moFree, ad-supported
Primary focusDebt payoff + Burden ScoreAutomated budget tracking
Debt-first designYes (primary)Light
ADHD-friendlyYes (designed for it)Low (busy dashboard)
Privacy modelLocal-first, no bank connections requiredBank account connections, ads served
Data ownershipOn-device with optional encrypted Google Drive backupIntuit holds the data; Mint was shut down Jan 2024 and migrated to Credit Karma
Canadian supportFull CAD + provincial contentWas available, status in flux post-shutdown
Offline modeFull offline operationNo
Burden ScoreIncludedNot offered

About Mint

Mint (Intuit Mint) costs Free, ad-supported. Its primary focus is automated budget tracking, and that shapes everything about how it handles debt.

Where Mint is strong

Where Mint is weak

About Unburden

Unburden is a debt payoff planner with a Burden Score (0 to 100) that measures financial vulnerability across five factors: income-to-debt ratio, minimum-payment strain, savings buffer, rate pressure, and debt mix. The app runs offline, stores your data on your device, and supports Canadian users natively.

Where Unburden is strong

Where Unburden is weak

When Mint wins

Mint does not really win anymore. If you were a Mint user, Credit Karma is your default successor, but the budgeting experience is much thinner than what Mint offered. Most former Mint users are now evaluating alternatives, which is a big reason this comparison exists.

When Unburden wins

Unburden wins when debt is the thing you actually need to solve. If your nights are spent running credit-card math in your head, if minimum payments feel like a tax on your peace of mind, if you want one number (the Burden Score) that tells you whether things are getting better or worse, Unburden is built for that exact feeling.

It also wins for privacy-conscious users who are not comfortable handing bank credentials to an aggregator, and for Canadian users who want CAD support and provincial guidance without jumping between products.

Our honest take

Mint is a good product at what it does. We are not trying to pretend otherwise. The question is not which one is better in the abstract; it is which job you are hiring an app to do.

If you are trying to kill debt, a dedicated debt tool outperforms a general money tool the same way a good chef's knife beats a multi-tool. Unburden is the chef's knife for debt. Mint is the multi-tool.

And if the Burden Score matters to you (knowing where you actually stand, not just your balance), that is something no other app in this category offers. We built it because none of the existing alternatives did.

The other question worth asking honestly: how much of the monthly price of a Mint subscription would actually be going to debt payoff if that were your only goal? For many people, a year of a $10 to $15 subscription would pay off $120 to $180 of principal on a high-interest card. That is not a small number when you are running tight.

What you can take from each

If you decide Mint is the better fit, a few things worth borrowing from the Unburden approach: pick a single strategy (snowball or avalanche) and stick with it for at least six months, automate one payment amount that is sustainable in a lean month, and check your progress quarterly instead of daily. The apps differ; the underlying habits are the same.

If you start with Unburden and later want a fuller budgeting layer, there is nothing stopping you from running both. Unburden for the debt plan, Mint for the broader money picture. The tradeoff is cost and cognitive load, but it is a reasonable setup for people with complex finances.

Switching cost

Moving from Mint to Unburden is straightforward because Unburden asks for your balances, APRs, and minimums, all of which you can enter manually. There is no account syncing to untangle. You can have a working plan in Unburden in under ten minutes, and if it does not fit, nothing breaks with your Mint setup.

The opposite direction is also smooth. Unburden's export gives you your balances and schedule; you can feed those into any budgeting tool.

Try Unburden free

Up to three debts, full snowball + avalanche comparisons, your Burden Score calculated locally on your device. No bank connections required.

Find your Burden Score

This page is educational. It is not financial, legal, or tax advice. Interest calculations use standard amortization math at a sample APR; your actual rates, fees, and terms will vary. Figures are illustrative, not a quote. Talk to a qualified professional before making decisions about debt, credit, or insolvency.