EveryDollar is a budgeting app — disciplined, line-by-line, and great if you can sustain it. Stablish is a behavior layer wrapped around The Money Map, with AI coaching and gamified wellness underneath. Different categories of product. Different outcomes.
Most members who download a budgeting app in January have stopped using it by April. That isn't laziness — it's the predictable arc of any tool that demands daily input. The honest comparison between EveryDollar and Stablish starts there: they aren't the same kind of thing.
There's also a deeper question hiding inside this comparison. Most churches don't have a budgeting problem — they have a giving rhythm problem. Roughly 70% of churchgoers give irregularly: at Christmas, maybe once mid-year, then nothing. Neither EveryDollar nor any traditional budgeting app moves the needle on that. Stablish was specifically built to convert irregular givers into recurring ones — through intelligent giving tools and stewardship coaching that compound over time.
EveryDollar is one of the best budgeting apps in the country. Stablish is something different — not a budgeting app, but a stewardship layer that sits over a member's financial life, reading their patterns, challenging their weak spots, and nudging them toward the heart God is forming in them. Let me walk through what that actually means.
The honest problem with budgeting apps
Budgeting works — when it's sustained. The hard truth is that for most members, it isn't.
Zero-based budgeting (the model EveryDollar runs on) requires a member to sit down at the start of each month, allocate every dollar of income to a category, and then update the budget as life happens. Done well, it produces total clarity. Done partially, it produces guilt. Done not at all — which is what happens to most people who download a budgeting app — it produces nothing.
This isn't a slight at EveryDollar. It's the nature of budgeting apps in general. They are manual control panels. The household has to drive them every week, and the second the manual effort stops, the value stops with it.
Budgeting is boring. Stewardship doesn't have to be.
If you've watched members start strong with budgeting in January and quietly drift by April, you already know this pattern. The tool didn't fail them. The model demanded more sustained effort than most people are wired to give.
What Stablish actually is
Stablish isn't trying to be a better EveryDollar. It's trying to do a different job entirely.
Stablish is a behavior layer built on top of a simple stewardship framework called The Money Map. The framework gives members a way to see their money biblically. The behavior layer is where the actual change happens.
Here's what the behavior layer does, every day, in the background:
- Reads patterns. AI looks at where a member is over-spending, where they're under-giving, where debt is bleeding their margin, where their first fruits drift below 10%.
- Identifies the weak spot. Not a generic "spend less" — a specific "you're at $480 on takeout this month, $310 above your average."
- Challenges them. Sends a personal nudge: "Want to cut $100 here next month? It pays off your last credit card three weeks early."
- Tracks the win. Updates their Stewardship Score, builds a streak, reinforces the habit.
It's gamified wellness, packaged inside a framework anyone can follow. Modern tech doing the heavy lifting so the member can do what only they can do — actually steward.
The framework underneath: The Money Map
Where EveryDollar gives a member dozens of categories to manage, the Money Map gives them four flows:
- First Fruits — giving, ≥10% (given before anything else gets allocated)
- Fixed Costs — housing, transportation, groceries, ≤50%
- Future Fund — savings, investing, debt payoff, ≥10%
- Free Spending — lifestyle, discretionary, ~30%
The point isn't elegance. The point is that a member can remember it. They can hold it in their head while standing in line at Target. They know what kind of money they're about to spend. The framework becomes a heart-level question, not a spreadsheet.
"Honor the LORD with your wealth, with the firstfruits of all your crops; then your barns will be filled to overflowing." — Proverbs 3:9-10 (NIV)
The Money Map is built for first-fruits-first stewardship. Give first. Live below your means. Let the rest reflect a life that honors God. The Stewardship Score grades the member against those biblical targets — not against an arbitrary budget they made up at midnight in January.
What EveryDollar is
To be fair to the comparison: EveryDollar is a personal budgeting app from Ramsey Solutions. It implements zero-based budgeting — every dollar gets a job before the month begins. The free tier is manual entry; Premium ($17.99/month or $79.99/year) adds bank syncing.
It fits inside the broader Ramsey ecosystem — Financial Peace University, the Baby Steps, the SmartVestor advisor network. For a household ready to do the disciplined work of zero-based budgeting and stick with it, it's a strong tool. Ramsey has discipled millions of households for forty years and we're genuinely grateful for the work.
The honest critique: it's a manual budgeting tool with a brand-loyal user base. It does what it does well. It just doesn't do what Stablish does.
The pricing comparison
| Plan | Stablish | EveryDollar |
|---|---|---|
| Free tier | — | Manual entry only (no bank sync) |
| Individual | $14.99/month (undercuts EveryDollar) | $17.99/month or $79.99/year |
| Church-sponsored | $0.49/attendee/month (Founder pricing; $0.99 future list, locked in for life) | No native church plan — only via Financial Peace University class hosting |
| Giving platform included | Yes — Intelligent Giving free for churches | No |
| AI coaching | Yes — pattern detection, cut-back challenges, ongoing nudges | No |
| Gamified scoring | Yes — Stewardship Score + streaks | No |
For a 500-attendee church, Stablish costs about $2,940/year at Founder pricing — every member, full app access. EveryDollar Premium for those same 500 members would cost roughly $40,000/year if every member individually bought the annual plan. Even at the future $0.99 list price ($5,940/year), the comparison still isn't close.
The behavior layer — what makes Stablish different
The reason most personal finance tools fade by month four is that they require the member to keep showing up to the tool. Stablish reverses that. The tool shows up to the member.
A few examples of what that looks like in practice:
- Cut-back challenges. AI spots that a member's "Free Spending" has run 30% over their target three months in a row. It generates a specific, doable challenge — "cut $150 from dining out next month" — and tracks it.
- First fruits nudges. A member's giving has slowed from $400/month to $0 over six weeks. Stablish surfaces the trend in the pastor's StashAI dashboard, and a gentle re-engagement message reaches the member.
- Debt-payoff momentum. A member sees in real time how cutting $X from one category moves up their snowball date by Y weeks. The motivation is visible, not abstract.
- Stewardship Score. A single number reflecting how a member is doing across the four flows. It moves up when they give consistently, save, and stay below 50% on Fixed Costs. It moves down when they drift. The score becomes the conversation.
This is what we mean by gamified wellness. Not slot-machine engagement loops — habit reinforcement that makes faithful financial discipleship something a member actually wants to come back to.
Who EveryDollar is best for
EveryDollar is best for individuals or households committed to zero-based budgeting — especially those already going through Financial Peace University or following the Baby Steps. Fine-grained control, monthly paycheck planning, and the trust of a 40-year brand. If a household will sustain the manual work, EveryDollar earns its place.
Who Stablish is best for
Stablish is best for churches that want to disciple every member's stewardship — not just the ones who would have signed up for a budgeting app on their own. The Christian distinctives are baked in: First Fruits before anything else, live below your means, give consistently, treat debt as a stewardship issue rather than a math problem. The behavior layer keeps it sustained.
If you're a pastor watching your members feel financially stuck, watching giving slowly erode, watching your stewardship sermon series produce a two-week bump and then nothing — Stablish was built for exactly that pattern.
The deeper pastoral question
This comparison surfaces something bigger than which tool to use.
Who should pay for a member's financial wellness — the member, or the church?
The traditional answer is the member. They buy the app, take the class, build the habit. The church preaches; the member operates.
The Stablish answer is that financial wellness is so directly tied to faithful living and faithful giving that the church has both the motivation and the leverage to provide it. For a church spending $2,940/year (Founder pricing) to give 500 members AI-coached stewardship, the upside in marriage health, member retention, recurring giving, and discipleship depth tends to pay back many times over.
This isn't a knock on EveryDollar. It's a different theology of who carries the weight. We believe that's the church.
Can you use both?
Yes — they're not mutually exclusive. A member could use EveryDollar for granular zero-based budgeting and Stablish for the Money Map, AI coaching, Stewardship Score, and giving. In practice, most members will pick one as their primary tool because both pull bank data via Plaid and both serve as the "where am I financially?" home base.
Churches choosing where to invest stewardship budget will typically pick one — usually based on whether they want individual-paid (EveryDollar through FPU) or church-sponsored, AI-coached (Stablish) as the model.
The bottom line
EveryDollar is a strong budgeting app. Stablish is a behavior layer wrapped around a biblical stewardship framework, with AI coaching and gamified wellness underneath.
If you're an individual asking "which budgeting app should I use?" — both work, pick the framework that fits your life.
If you're a pastor asking "how do we actually disciple our members' stewardship in a way that lasts past the sermon?" — that's the question Stablish was specifically built to answer. Book a 15-minute walk-through and we'll show you what your members would experience. No pitch. Just an honest look at whether it would serve your team.
Whatever tool you choose, the deeper work is the same: discipling generous, faithful Christians who steward what God has entrusted them with. The platform is the obstacle removed. The Spirit does the rest.
"I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the increase." — 1 Corinthians 3:6 (ESV)
Frequently asked questions
Is Stablish the same as EveryDollar?
No. EveryDollar is a personal budgeting app — manual zero-based budgeting in the Ramsey ecosystem. Stablish is a behavior layer built on top of a stewardship framework called The Money Map, with AI coaching, cut-back challenges, a Stewardship Score, and an integrated giving platform — sponsored by the church for every member. Different categories of product.
What does 'behavior layer' actually mean?
It means the app does the work the member usually has to remember to do. AI continually reads transaction patterns, identifies weak spots (overspending, slowing giving, debt drag), generates personalized challenges to cut back, and reinforces the wins through a Stewardship Score and streaks. Most budgeting apps wait for the user to log in. The behavior layer comes to the user.
Why doesn't Stablish use Dave Ramsey's Baby Steps?
We respect Ramsey's work and believe the Baby Steps have helped millions. Stablish uses its own framework — The Money Map — because it was designed for behavior-layer coaching: four memorable flows (First Fruits, Fixed Costs, Future Fund, Free Spending) that AI can nudge and grade against in real time. The Money Map is biblically anchored on giving first and living below your means.
Why would my church pay for stewardship instead of having members buy a budgeting app themselves?
Because asking individual members to buy a budgeting app and stick with it for 12 months has a low success rate. Most never download it; most who do fade by month four. A church-sponsored layer that runs in the background — AI watching patterns, generating cut-back challenges, surfacing giving slowdowns — produces sustained behavior change at the congregation level. For $0.49 per attendee per month at Founder pricing (or $0.99 future list, still under a dollar), the church gets that with Stablish.
How much does EveryDollar cost?
EveryDollar Premium is $17.99/month or $79.99/year for an individual. A free tier exists with manual entry only — no automatic bank syncing. Premium is also bundled with Financial Peace University when offered through a church or workplace.
How much does Stablish cost?
$0.49 per attendee per month when sponsored by a church (Founder pricing — 50% off the $0.99 future list, locked in for life; billed annually, no minimum). For individuals whose church doesn't sponsor it, Stablish is $14.99/month — intentionally cheaper than EveryDollar's $17.99 to make the choice easier. The Intelligent Giving platform is free for churches.
Does Stablish include a giving platform?
Yes. Stablish includes Intelligent Giving — Express Give, AutoGive (recurring donations), and tap-to-give hardware (StablishTap). EveryDollar does not include a giving platform.