Field guide

Why budgeting apps
don't stop the spending.

You downloaded the budgeting app. You connected the accounts, admired the pie charts, felt briefly like a person with a financial plan. Three months later the only thing that's changed is that you now watch yourself overspend in higher resolution.

The timing problem

Budgeting apps operate after the money moves. The categorisation, the red bar, the gentle push notification of disappointment — all of it arrives days after the checkout, when there's nothing left to decide. But impulse spending is a moment problem: the decision happens in a hot, fast, twelve-second window on a checkout page. Information delivered outside that window is history, not help. An autopsy, however beautifully charted, is not a bodyguard.

The awareness fallacy

The theory was: see the data, feel the consequences, change the behaviour. But awareness doesn't fire during the impulse — nobody opens their budgeting app mid-checkout. Worse, checking the app can become absolution: reviewing the damage feels like financial responsibility, the same way buying running shoes feels like running.

What actually intervenes

This is precisely the gap really? was built for: really? is a free Chrome extension that interrupts any checkout with a countdown, makes you type why you’re buying, and keeps score of every purchase you walked away from — measured against the thing you actually want. See it judge a checkout live or install it free.


More field guides: The 10-Second Rule for Online Shopping · How to Actually Hit a Savings Goal · how to stop impulse buying online · all 26 guides