Just been diving into these round up apps everyone keeps talking about and honestly it's kind of genius how simple they are. Basically your purchases get rounded up to the nearest dollar and that spare change goes into savings or investments automatically. Like if you spend 9.69 on coffee, you get charged 10 and the 31 cents just sits there working for you without you having to think about it.



I looked at a bunch of them and the concept is the same across most platforms but they've got different angles depending on what you're trying to do. If you want to invest the rounded up amounts, Acorns is the one that started this whole thing and people seem to average saving like 30 bucks a month just from the round ups alone. There's also a multiplier feature where you can make it round up 2x or 3x if you want to be more aggressive about it.

For people with kids, Greenlight Max is interesting because parents can control everything and kids can actually learn about investing with fractional shares. Chime is more about the basic banking side with their high yield savings account so your round ups actually earn you something. Current has these Savings Pods which is kind of like digital envelopes for different goals.

Stash caught my eye because of the Stock-Back card where you earn stock rewards on purchases, not just cash back. And if you're trying to kill debt, Qoins is specifically designed for that where your round ups go toward paying off credit cards or loans instead of just sitting in savings. Qapital lets you customize how much to round up to, so you could round 5.50 up to 10 if you wanted to save more aggressively.

The real question is whether round up apps actually work. I think they do if you're consistent with them. Yeah the amounts are small but over a month that's real money. The thing is they work best if you're already spending regularly with a card. If you're someone who barely uses cards it won't help much. Also check the fees because if you're only saving a few dollars a month and paying monthly subscription fees you're defeating the purpose.

Security-wise they all seem legit with FDIC insurance up to 250k on savings which is solid. Most have encryption and identity protection too. The main thing is don't expect round up apps to fund your retirement or anything major. They're more for the automated savings that adds up over time without you having to remember to transfer money manually. Honestly that's the appeal for me, just set it and forget it while your savings trickle up.
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