Savings

How it works:
You create a savings goal — "Emergency fund," "Summer trip," "New laptop," whatever matters to you — and set a target amount. Then, every time you add money toward that goal, the progress bar fills up.
That's the whole thing. And that simplicity is exactly the point.
There's no complex investment logic, no automated transfers you didn't ask for, no confusing financial jargon. Savings is a clear, visual commitment between you and a goal you set for yourself. You decide when to add money and how much. The widget just makes sure you can see how far you've come — and how far you have left to go.
You can run multiple savings goals at once. An emergency fund building slowly in the background while you aggressively save for a vacation. A long-term goal sitting next to a short-term one. Each with its own progress bar, its own target, its own satisfying little moment when you add to it and watch the bar move.
Why people love it:
Because saving money is psychologically hard when the progress is invisible. A bank balance is just a number — it doesn't tell you "you're 63% of the way to your emergency fund." The Savings widget does. And that visibility is what turns saving from a chore into something that actually feels rewarding.
There's a reason every fitness app has a progress bar. It works. Same principle, different currency.
Perfect for:
People who want to save but struggle without a visual goal to work toward. Anyone building an emergency fund, saving for a trip, or putting money aside for a specific purchase. People who are motivated by seeing progress rather than just watching a bank balance fluctuate.

