That said, Moneydance lags behind Quicken Deluxe (the Editors' Choice pick for paid personal finance services) due to a dated, sometimes clunky user interface and substandard mobile apps. It also supports multiple international currencies and cryptocurrencies.
Moneydance offers much of the same functionality as Quicken, including income and expense management, online banking and bill pay, investment tracking, budgeting, and reports. Today, the personal finance app runs on Windows, Mac, and Linux, with a $49.99 price tag (after 100 free manual transactions). One of those rivals was Moneydance, a free, open-source, desktop application released in 1998. Quicken faced competition shortly after its 1991 launch.