License: Freeware $0.00 OS: WinXP,WinVista,WinVista x64,Win7 x32,Win7 x64,Windows2000,Windows2003,WinServer, Requirements: Windows XP/Vista/7 Publisher: ProperSoft Homepage: http://www.propersoft.net
Simple Home Budget Lite is a personal budget manager for home users. The program lets you enter transactions of all kinds and analyze income and expenses shown in the summary color-coded Overview chart. At a glance, you’ll see what you have and will have coming in, going out, and most importantly, what’s left over each month to spend or save. It’ll help you pinpoint costs and areas of excessive expenditure and control your finances better.
Simple Home Budget Lite opens to the main window with the sidebar and tabbed main area. The sidebar shows the calendar to select an active month of data, the form to add new transactions and totals of income, expenses and net income for a selected month, as well as expected totals for scheduled transactions. The tabbed area provides a quick access to transactions for a selected month or day, recurring transactions, summarized monthly view of income and expense by categories and graphic overview for a year. Thanks to the intuitive design, the majority of data entry and maintenance operations are less than two mouse clicks away!
Adding a new transaction is remarkably easy. Quickly add a new one-time or recurring transaction from the sidebar form or the ‘New’ dialog on the toolbar, specify the type of transaction: Expense, Income, or Refund. Then select the start date, the category, enter comments and finally set up the amount. That’s it. Now the transaction record is displayed in the list of all transactions and in the Overview chart, showing your current financial position and progress for 12 months. You can edit, delete, search or print transactions easily.
Other important features let you switch between databases, back up and restore the database. The program has nothing that could annoy the user. There are no banners, no ads embedded in icons, no links to sponsors luring you into buying the products or services you do not need – nothing that has no practical value for managing your budget.