Gamifying Personal Finance – Charlie Personal Finance App Puts the Fun in Rainy Day Fund
In line with this trend is the relaunch of personal finance app, Charlie. As TechCrunch reports, the app has relaunched with a focus on helping Americans get out of debt while developing better financial habits.
The app offers users a snapshot of their current debt load and how long it would take to pay it off making minimum payments. CEO Ilian Georgiev notes that this is often the first time users are seeing this type of modelling. Though likely jarring to users at first, this is precisely the reaction that makes the app potentially useful. The shock that comes when a user realizes they could be in debt for 50 years, is enough to spur them to action. The app allows users to visualize how long it would take them to get out of debt if they allocated more than the minimum payments towards their debt.
The app also helps users identify areas where they could be saving. Users can create fun rules, which when triggered, transfer money from a user’s bank account to their “Charlie digital wallet”. This amounts to a modern, digital version of a “swear jar”. Users can get creative, instructing the app to transfer a certain amount every time a contestant on the Bachelor says they are “here for the right reasons” or every time they make an impulse Amazon purchase. The app features a progress bar, that illustrates how close the user is to achieving their financial goal, and once achieved rewards them with confetti.
Unlike budgeting apps like Mint and You Need a Budget, Charlie is aimed specifically at helping users pay down debt. Originally launched in 2016, the app was meant to analyze transaction data to determine areas where users could improve their finances. The re-launch focused on debt solutions was largely driven by user feedback. Charlie even plans to offer debt refinancing solutions at some point, as the company believes they can offer lower interest rates to app users that have demonstrated they are low risk borrowers through good saving habits.
Author: Emma Baumann, 2020/2021 Articling Student-at-law
Photo by Startup Stock Photos from Pexels
Expertise
Insights
-
Privacy and Data Protection
Canadian Privacy Regulators Publish Findings and Guidance on OpenAI Privacy Compliance
Following a multi-year joint investigation, federal and provincial privacy regulators recently published their findings with respect to OpenAI’s collection and use of personal information to train… -
Technology
Anthropic Prepares for Public Markets
Anthropic, one of the world’s leading AI firms, has confidentially submitted a draft S-1 registration statement to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, paving the way for a potential initial… -
Technology
Blast-off: The Race to IPO in the American Technology Landscape
On May 20, 2026, Space Exploration Technologies Corp. (“SpaceX”) filed an S-1 form with the United States’ Securities and Exchange Commission, indicating its intention to launch an initial public… -
Technology
Humans: 0, Robot: 1 – Sony’s Project Ace Robot Beats the Pros
Developed by Sony AI, a new robot named Ace has outperformed elite table tennis players, marking a significant milestone in AI and robotics. While AI systems have previously rivalled or surpassed… -
Technology
TikTok Cleared to Continue Canadian Operations Following National Security Review
The Government of Canada (the “Government”) has concluded its most recent national security review of TikTok, the popular short-form video platform owned by Chinese technology company ByteDance Ltd… -
Technology
Confined Space Robotics Awarded $1.5M Contract to Automate Blast and Paint at Seaspan Shipyard
Confined Space Robotics (“CSR”) has been awarded a $1.5 million contract by Seaspan Shipyards to develop and integrate abrasive blast and paint robotic systems at Seaspan’s Vancouver shipyard. Seaspan…