CashWise for College Students
Part-time income, shared everything, and forty financial decisions a week. Handled in one app.
The short answer
CashWise is a budgeting app designed for college students: it connects to your bank (read-only, via Plaid), turns your part-time income and upcoming bills into a live safe-to-spend number, and includes GroupVault for splitting rent, groceries, and trip costs with roommates and friends, settled through Venmo, Cash App, or Zelle. Joining a group is free; CashWise Pro is $78/year, cheaper than YNAB ($109/yr) or Monarch (~$100/yr), neither of which can split expenses at all.
Budgeting advice is written for people with salaries. Yours arrives as a Thursday-night shift, a refund check in January, birthday money, and a summer job. Then it disappears into a life where almost every cost is shared: rent with roommates, formal tickets, the gas for the drive home, the group dinner someone covered and everyone forgot.
Traditional budgeting apps treat all of that as noise. CashWise treats it as the whole point.
Category budgets assume a paycheck cadence you don't have. When money arrives in lumps (financial aid refunds, shift work, parental top-ups), "you've budgeted $200 for food this month" means nothing. What you need is the current truth: what's safe to spend today.
Rent, utilities, groceries, late-night food orders, spring break. The most important transactions in your month involve other people. A solo budgeting app sees "$212 — Airbnb" and calls it overspending; it can't see that three friends owe you most of it.
On a student budget there's no buffer absorbing mistakes. An untracked $40 IOU or a forgotten subscription is the difference between fine and overdraft fees. The cost of not knowing is highest exactly when you have the least.
Connect your bank once (read-only; CashWise never sees your login and never moves money). Safe-to-spend recalculates as money lands and bills approach, so a lumpy income still produces a daily answer you can act on.
One vault for the apartment, one for the spring break trip, one for the tailgate fund. Each tracks who paid what and who owes whom, and settles through Venmo, Cash App, or Zelle. No spreadsheet, no "I'll get you back," no chasing.
Spending insights flag the patterns: the delivery-fee creep, the subscription you forgot after the free trial, the week your food spending doubled. You hear about it before it becomes a problem at the worst possible time.
Joining GroupVaults and tracking your payments is free, so the whole house can be in without anyone paying. Pro (bank sync, safe-to-spend, AI insights, creating vaults) is $78/year, the cost of one textbook you didn't need.
Link your bank via Plaid: 12,000+ institutions, bank-level encryption, read-only access.
CashWise nets out upcoming bills and obligations and gives you one live spendable number.
Invite your roommates or trip group free. Log shared costs as they happen; CashWise does the math.
When the trip's over, everyone sees the same total and pays through Venmo, Cash App, or Zelle.
The free plan lets you join GroupVaults, participate in shared expenses, and track your payments. So if your roommate runs the vault, you participate at no cost. CashWise Pro, which unlocks bank sync, safe-to-spend, AI insights, and creating vaults, is $9.99/month or $78/year as of mid-2026.
Yes. CashWise uses Plaid, the same connection layer trusted by Venmo and Robinhood, with bank-level encryption and read-only access. CashWise never sees your credentials and can never move your money.
YNAB free-for-a-year is a real deal if you want to practice zero-based budgeting. But it can't split expenses, and after year one it's $109/year. CashWise requires no methodology, costs $78/year for Pro, and handles the group money that dominates student life.
Vaults are per-group, not per-lease. Settle the balance, archive it, and spin up a new one next housing situation. Your personal budgeting carries on untouched.
Join the CashWise early access. Bank-connected budgeting plus group expense splitting, settled in the apps you already use.