An App Store review from April 2026 summed up what a lot of Bobby users had been quietly feeling: "This is a weekend project at best that has been abandoned." The last feature update shipped June 2025. The patch after that came in December 2025. Developer support requests have gone unanswered for days or longer.
Quick answer
If you need a web dashboard — on Android, Windows, or any non-Apple device — Bobby is not the right tool. For manual entry without handing over bank credentials, web-first manual trackers are the cleanest swap. If you want auto-detection from your bank, Rocket Money covers that — but it requires bank login via Plaid. If you want Android parity first and foremost, ReSubs is the only one that covers iOS, Android, and web together.
What Bobby actually is — and isn't
Bobby is a clean, well-designed iOS app made by Yummygum, a design studio in Amsterdam. At 4.7 stars from more than 7,900 ratings, users clearly love what it does. What it does not do: web, Android (abandoned), CSV import, Gmail sync, AI extraction. It is manual entry all the way, which is a perfectly reasonable philosophy — but it only works if the app is alive and accessible where you use it.
The slowing update cadence is the real friction. Version 3.10.3 shipped June 2025. Version 3.10.4 followed in December 2025. Nothing since. For a tracker that never touches a bank account, "bug-fix-only" updates are a yellow flag, not a red one — but the unanswered support tickets push it into red territory.
The decision rule
Before picking a replacement, run this three-way filter:
- Do you want zero bank login? → stick to manual-entry web trackers (Subnesio, TrackMySubs, Wallos).
- Do you want auto-detection from transactions? → bank-sync apps (Rocket Money, Copilot Money), accepting that they need your credentials.
- Is Android the main gap, not web? → ReSubs handles all three platforms; Wallos works on any browser if you can host it.
This is not a list of "top picks" — it is a filter. The best app is the one that matches your trust model, not the one with the most features.
Manual-entry web trackers
Subnesio runs in any browser — iPhone, Android, iPad, Mac, Windows — with no app install. The free plan covers 10 subscriptions with a live dashboard. Pro is $29.99/year (or $59 lifetime) and adds email reminders 1–30 days before renewal plus iCal sync to Google or Apple Calendar. No bank connection, no CSV import. If you liked Bobby's clean manual-entry approach but need cross-device access, this is the smallest context switch. Compare the full feature set at the pricing page.
TrackMySubs is web-only in the opposite direction: no mobile app. The free tier covers 10 subscriptions; Unlimited is $10/month (or $99.99/year). CSV import and Zapier integration only unlock on paid plans. Multi-currency across 150+ countries. If you already keep a spreadsheet and want to migrate it, TrackMySubs CSV import makes the switch mechanical. The trade-off is the lack of any mobile client — why a web tracker without a bank login can still beat the bank app at this job is worth reading before you commit.
Wallos is free, open-source, and self-hosted. It has 8,100+ GitHub stars and its latest release (v4.9.5, June 2026) is actively maintained. Notification channels include email, Discord, Telegram, Pushover, Gotify, and webhooks — more than any other app here. Fixer API handles multi-currency. Deployable to Railway's free tier if you do not want to run your own server. The catch is obvious: the typical Bobby user who wants a simple app is not the Wallos target user. If you are comfortable with Docker, it is the most capable free option on this list.
Bank-sync apps
Rocket Money (formerly Truebill) is available on iOS, Android, and web. Its free tier links bank accounts and surfaces recurring charges. Premium ($7–$14/month) adds the cancellation concierge — you ask them, they cancel on your behalf. Auto-detection runs through Plaid, which means you hand over bank credentials. That is the central trade-off: the convenience of automatic detection versus granting a third party read access to your account. How to cancel subscriptions you forgot about walks through what that process looks like when you find surprises.
Copilot Money launched its web app on December 15, 2025, becoming the first premium Apple-first budgeting app to reach a browser. It costs $95/year (no free tier) and requires bank sync. The catch: the web version is not optimized for mobile and is missing the goals tab, cash flow tab, and year-in-review features present on iOS. No Android app exists and none has been announced. For Bobby users who want the cleanest Apple-to-web upgrade in the premium segment, Copilot is the answer — but go in knowing the web version is still catching up to iOS.
Cross-platform dedicated tracker
ReSubs covers iOS, Android, and web in a single product. Import options include manual entry, CSV, Gmail receipt scanning, and AI extraction from screenshots or billing emails. Premium runs $3.99/month, $17.99/year, or $36.99–$43.99 lifetime. The App Store rating is only 3.6 from 16 ratings — a thin sample compared to Bobby's 7,900+ reviews — so treat that number with caution. For anyone whose main complaint about Bobby is the Android gap, ReSubs is the most direct response.
Side-by-side summary
| App | Platforms | Price | Import | Bank login |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subnesio | Web (any browser) | Free / $29.99yr / $59 lifetime | Manual | No |
| TrackMySubs | Web only | Free / $10mo | CSV + Zapier | No |
| Wallos | Self-hosted web | Free (open-source) | Manual | No |
| ReSubs | iOS + Android + web | Free / $17.99yr | CSV, Gmail, AI | No |
| Rocket Money | iOS + Android + web | Free / $7–14mo | Auto (bank) | Yes (Plaid) |
| Copilot Money | iOS/Mac/web (no Android) | $95/yr | Auto (bank) | Yes |
The best tracker is the one you will actually maintain. If Bobby served you well until the platform gap became a problem, the manual-entry web options in this list will feel familiar the moment you open them.
P.S. Bobby's $1.99 lifetime unlock is still one of the best-value software purchases on the App Store — if you only ever use an iPhone and the update cadence does not bother you, there is no reason to leave.
