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Increase Your Net Worth at Mint.com

by Smithee on February 19, 2009

in Software

Mint.com, a free online money tracking system, has just started including property values like houses and vehicles when calculating your net worth.

Previously, the service would total up your cash and other positive account balances, then subtract your credit card debt, loans and mortgage amounts, leaving you with an almost certainly negative net worth. In my case it was somewhere around -$178,000.

Now you can go into “Your Accounts” and tell it about the real things you own that have value. It uses a service called cyberhomes to estimate your home’s worth. Fortunately, it also lets you override this automatic value, since cyberhomes had no data for my house. I got an amount for my house from the local county appraisal district Web site and added in the Kelly Blue Book value for the two cars we have. Et voilà, our net worth is now approximately $50,000 in the black.

I think it could probably use a little fine-tuning but at least now I don’t feel so bad about our situation. Read more by Flexo about how to calculate your net worth.

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About the Author

Smithee formerly lived primarily on credit cards and the good will of his friends. He is a newbie to personal finance but quickly learning from his past mistakes.

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{ 6 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Beth February 19, 2009 at 9:07 am

Good to know. Thanks for the tip.

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2 Archetypical February 19, 2009 at 4:09 pm

Thanks for the tip on Mint. I had been using yodlee, but this seems to have some better categorization algorithms. Both allow you to count your mortgage and loan information in your net worth, but the interface at Mint is a bit sleeker as well. When it comes to home valuation, yodlee uses zillow (dot com), which, in my area, seems more in step with what houses are actually selling for than cyberhomes is. Either way, the site is a great tool — thanks Smithee!

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3 Tim February 19, 2009 at 4:41 pm

I used mint.com, but I decided that having all that information held by one website was not a good idea at all. although the concept is good, people really need to be vigilant in protecting their private information. especially given all the security leaks and ad hoc changes in terms of service/use (look at facebook).

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4 DR February 20, 2009 at 5:51 am

I’ve always liked Mint’s interface and features. But the one thing still driving me crazy is that in order to classify all your expenses, you have to do a lot of manual editing. I wish the money management software folks would get together with the banking folks and work out a standard so that transactions could be easily and automatically classified.

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5 Andrew February 20, 2009 at 10:35 am

Mint uses Yodlee Moneycenter on the backend, but Mint must not use it for categorization . Two years ago when I got started, Yodlee had custom categories and I think Mint just recently added that. Yodlee is usually pretty spot on for me and I normally just have to adjust Paypal transactions.

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6 thomas February 22, 2009 at 12:13 pm

Definitely not a fan of cyberhomes as they informed me that my home value dropped so much. Good times I tell ya.

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