HELM vs Quicken Simplifi. Budgeting vs decision-making.
Quicken Simplifi is the modern, web-and-mobile rebuild of Quicken classic. It's a clean, well-priced budgeting tool that does what its name promises — simplifies. HELM is not a budgeting tool. HELM is a tax-aware wealth OS for HNW operators making quarterly decisions on multi-account portfolios. Different jobs at different scales of complexity. The honest comparison is about which scale of complexity you're operating at — and most operators reading this will be better served by Simplifi than by HELM.
What Quicken Simplifi does well
Quicken Simplifi launched in 2020 as Intuit's competitor-killer for the Mint exodus, then itself transitioned out of Intuit's hands. Today it's the modern face of the Quicken brand: web app + iOS + Android, around $5.99/month, with auto-sync to thousands of US financial institutions. It's positioned as the "approachable" alternative to the desktop-Quicken complexity of the previous generation. The audience it serves is exactly the audience that name suggests — operators who want their finances simplified, not deepened.
Where Simplifi shines:
- Budgeting workflow. Spending plan ("you've planned $400 for groceries this month, you're at $312") is the headline feature, well-executed. Better than Mint's was at sunset, comparable to YNAB's logic without YNAB's zero-based-budgeting religion.
- Bills + recurring income forecasting. "On the 15th you have rent, on the 20th the credit card auto-pay, on the 25th payday" — the calendar view shows the cashflow rhythm in a way that makes a single-account daily-spend operator feel in control.
- Auto-categorized transactions. Reasonable accuracy out of the box, easily corrected. Nothing exotic; it works.
- Net-worth widget. Shows current and historical net worth. It's an aggregate display, not an analytical tool, but it's there.
- Pricing. $5.99/month or roughly $48/year on annual is genuinely affordable. For the audience it serves, the price-to-utility ratio is excellent.
The architecture, plainly
Simplifi connects to your accounts via direct integrations and (for institutions where they don't have a direct connection) third-party aggregators including Plaid. Your brokerage / bank credentials (or the OAuth equivalent) are stored encrypted on the aggregator side, with persistent connections that allow daily refresh. This is the standard fintech aggregator model — the same model used by Empower, Monarch, Copilot, and the legacy Mint. The pros and cons are well-traveled territory; we wrote the long version in the aggregator problem pillar.
HELM is manual-first. No Plaid, no Yodlee, no MX, no Finicity, no direct brokerage integration. You enter holdings yourself; we never request any external credential. The trade is real: Simplifi gives you daily-refresh visibility without typing anything; HELM gives you no credential surface and a quarterly cadence that requires manual entry. The whole architectural argument is in our complete data inventory.
Where HELM sits on the curve
HELM is built for operators where the dominant financial decisions are:
- Tax-aware portfolio sequencing. When to sell which lots in which accounts to optimize wash-sale, harvest, and concentration. Tax Brain runs this continuously across every entered position.
- Equity-comp event handling. ISO exercise dates with AMT modeling, ESPP basis-adjustment tracking, RSU sell-vs-hold, QSBS §1202 clock countdown.
- Multi-decade scenario planning. Monte Carlo cash-flow with 10,000 sequence-of-returns runs, what-if scenarios versioned for comparison, FI probability surface — the math behind pillar #6.
- Document handoff. The banker-grade quarterly PDF you forward to your CPA, CFP, estate attorney, or family — full spec in pillar #9.
- Estate readiness. Document Vault with per-account encryption for tax letters, estate plans, beneficiary forms. The "where the keys are" page for the surviving-spouse use case.
None of this is on Simplifi's roadmap because it's not what Simplifi is for. The two products are at different points on a curve, and honestly almost every operator we'd talk to should start at the Simplifi end and work outward. If you don't already know which point on the curve you're at, you're at the Simplifi end.
Direct comparison — feature by feature
| Dimension | HELM | Quicken Simplifi |
|---|---|---|
| Primary job-to-be-done | Quarterly tax-aware decisions on multi-account portfolio | Monthly budgeting + daily spend visibility |
| Architecture | Manual-first, structured app | Aggregator-pulled, auto-sync |
| Brokerage credentials required | No | Yes — direct + Plaid/aggregator |
| Budgeting / spending plan | No — by design | Yes — strong feature |
| Bills + recurring forecast | No | Yes |
| Auto-categorized transactions | Not stored | Yes |
| Net-worth display | Yes — analytical | Yes — aggregate widget |
| Wash-sale across accounts (§1091) | Yes — Tax Brain | No |
| QSBS §1202 clock | Yes | No |
| Tax-loss harvest opportunities | Yes | No |
| RMD / IRA contribution tracking | Yes | No |
| Monte Carlo simulator | Yes — 10,000 runs | No |
| Scenario builder | Yes — versioned | No |
| Encrypted document vault | Yes | No |
| AI specialist (tax + FI math) | Yes — Ask HELM | No |
| Banker-grade quarterly PDF | Yes | Reports exist; not advisor-handoff format |
| Mobile app | PWA — works everywhere, not native | Native iOS + Android |
| Pricing | $948/yr Founding (locked for life) | ~$48–$72/yr |
| Best fit | $1M+ NW · 5+ accounts · equity comp · tax-aware decisions | Daily-spend operators of any NW; great budgeting default |
The honest "should I switch" rubric
Don't switch from Simplifi to HELM unless all three of these are true:
- Your net worth is $1M+ and at least half of it sits in investment accounts (not real estate, not cash) where wash-sale and harvest math actually matters
- You have at least one of: vesting RSUs/ISOs/ESPP, multi-state tax exposure, QSBS-eligible founder/early-employee stock, an inherited IRA with RMD obligations, or a CPA bill above $3K/year
- You're already finding yourself doing manual tax + portfolio analysis somewhere (Google Sheet, Notion doc, scratched notebook) because Simplifi doesn't go there
If even one of those is missing, stay on Simplifi. You'll get more value per dollar there. The relationship between price and value bends sharply at the inflection point where multi-account tax complexity becomes the dominant variable in your financial life — and that point is usually $1M+ NW with equity comp or a comparable trigger. Below that point, Simplifi is the right tool. Above that point, the tooling needs to specialize, and HELM is one of the few options that does.
Run both, intentionally
The pattern we hear most often from HELM founding-operators who started elsewhere: "I run Simplifi (or Copilot, or Tiller) for daily spend visibility, and HELM for the quarterly tax + portfolio work." The two tools occupy non-overlapping jobs. The cost of running both is around $1,000/year, which is dwarfed by the value of catching one wash-sale, one ESPP basis-adjustment error, or one QSBS clock that you'd otherwise miss. Buying both is not a luxury; it's a bet on attention-allocation that usually pays back inside the first quarter.
Founding-operator slot at $79/mo, locked for the lifetime of your subscription.
If you've graduated past "where did my money go this month" and the dominant question is now "what's the right tax-aware decision this quarter," HELM is the tool built for that question. After 25 founding operators, the price moves to retail.
See HELM →This comparison was written by the team that builds HELM. Quicken Simplifi is a well-executed product serving its audience well; we used factual public information about its architecture and pricing as of May 2026. We didn't poll Simplifi users or run formal research. Most operators reading this should be on Simplifi, not HELM — that's why most of this comparison says so. None of this is legal, security, or financial advice; verify against your own threat model and CPA before switching either direction.