Spreadsheets have been the default personal finance tool for decades, and for good reason. A well-built Google Sheets or Excel tracker gives you complete control over every data point, formula, and visualisation. You can model compound interest, create custom savings projections, track multiple accounts simultaneously, and build dashboards that show exactly what matters to you. According to a 2025 survey by Money Dashboard, 28% of UK adults who actively track their finances use spreadsheets, making them the second most popular tool after banking apps. Power users love the flexibility: conditional formatting that turns cells red when spending exceeds budget, pivot tables that analyse spending by category over time, and macros that automate repetitive data entry. For people with complex financial situations — multiple savings accounts, investments, rental income, variable freelance earnings — a spreadsheet can handle nuances that most apps can't. The sunk cost of learning formulas creates a sense of investment that keeps people engaged. However, this very complexity is also the spreadsheet's greatest weakness. The tool that can do everything is the tool that demands everything from its user.
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