And if you don’t like it, they do have a money back policy. My advice is if you haven’t looked at quicken in years, it may be worth revisiting. I do see that they seem to be actively soliciting ideas for new/improved features, and even grading themselves on what has been accomplished. Here are some past Quicken products that have been discontinued: Product. You can find yours by navigating to Help > About Quicken on Windows, or Quicken > About Quicken on Mac. It is not without compromises, but there is nothing that is a show stopper nor anything that causes me more than a few extra minutes per week. Every Quicken product has an expiration date. I find it to be a more solid offering than either MoneyDance or the old Quicken. In essence, MoneyDance had turned into everything I hated about Quicken.įor $35 (on Amazon) I thought I’d give Quicken a try again. For example, promising proper support for cash brokerage accounts in at least 3 different versions, but never delivering. And, of course, they stopped supporting those older versions that I needed.
In some cases, the work arounds were not supported in later versions, so I could not upgrade. But through the years, I started to stack on work arounds on top of work arounds. I switched to MoneyDance and was relatively happy. I too had dumped Quicken in 2011 because of the kludgy software and some basic download options that they could not support (like downloading two different accounts from the same institution).