TA Titan Arch

Konnie guide

Shared household budgeting without the spreadsheet mess.

A shared household budget is not just a list of numbers. It is a way for the people in a home to see what is planned, what has been spent, and what still needs attention without relying on memory, screenshots, or awkward follow-up messages.

Why shared budgeting is different

Solo budgeting is already hard enough when spending is spread across shops, subscriptions, fuel, bills, and one-off plans. Shared household budgeting adds another layer: more than one person may be buying things, making plans, or remembering different parts of the same household picture.

That is why many homes fall back to a mix of bank apps, notes, chats, spreadsheets, receipts on the kitchen side, and memory. Those tools can work for one part of the problem, but they rarely give everyone the same view at the same time.

Konnie is being built for that middle ground: practical budgeting for everyday spending, with enough shared context to understand what happened without turning the home into a finance project.

How Konnie helps

One shared view, with review before saving.

Plan the month

Set a household budget and use categories or spaces only where they make the picture clearer.

Add spending quickly

Record day-to-day spending before it gets forgotten, whether it belongs to groceries, fuel, a plan, or a shared event.

Review receipts

Receipt photos become review drafts. You can check, rename, remove, or correct lines before they affect the saved record.

Keep useful context

Attach notes, lists, plans, spaces, or events so spending is connected to what it was actually for.

Stay non-blaming

Shared visibility should reduce guessing and chasing, not turn every spend into an argument.

Export when needed

CSV export keeps household data portable, so the budget does not feel trapped in one app.

What a shared household budget can include

A useful shared budget normally starts with the obvious regular spending: groceries, utilities, rent or mortgage, fuel, transport, subscriptions, household supplies, eating out, gifts, and savings. It can then grow carefully around real life: a birthday, a trip, a food plan, a pet, school costs, a shared house shop, or a one-off repair.

Konnie keeps that structure optional. Some households need one simple monthly plan. Others need a few named spaces, events, or notes to make spending easier to understand. The goal is not to force a perfect system; it is to make the next useful detail easy to add.

For people who prefer starting on a larger screen, Budget Buddy can create a draft budget and QR code that imports into Konnie for review.

What Konnie does not try to be

Konnie is not a bank, lender, credit product, investment app, tax service, or financial advice service. It does not need to connect to bank accounts to help a household plan and monitor everyday spending.

Receipt scanning is also deliberately described as photo to review draft. Household receipts can be messy, faded, folded, or printed in odd formats. Konnie should help speed up entry, but users should still review the draft before saving it.

Android first, iOS planned next

Konnie is launching on Android first, with iOS planned afterwards. The long-term direction is that household information, including Konnie calendar events, stays in sync for household members across Android and iOS once both apps are available.

You can register interest for Android, iOS, or both on the Konnie launch page.