5 Personal Finance Sites Every Gen Z & Millennial Should Bookmark Now đ§ đ¸
Okay, fellow money-movers, grab your favorite latte (or oat-milk latte, we donât judge) and letâs chat. The world of personal finance used to come with a ton of jargon, dusty spreadsheets, and letâs be frank... boredom. But newsflash: it doesnât have to anymore. At FreeBudget we believe budgeting can be free, fun, and totally transparent. Weâre here to help you build money confidence, not just check boxes.
So if youâre ready to level up your money game, I pulled together five stellar websites for you: ones that donât talk down to you, donât bury you in financial fluff, and absolutely understand what it means to actually live while you budget. Think of them as the cheat codes for your wallet.
1. The Ways To Wealth
Founded by CFPÂŽ R.J. Weiss, The Ways To Wealth is all about real talk + actionable advice. Their mission: âmake a difference in peopleâs lives by delivering objective, reliable advice and recommendations that help them make more money, save more money, and invest their money wisely.â The Ways To Wealth+1
Why youâll love it:
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Tons of guides like âHow to Manage Your Money in Five Simple Stepsâ that skip the fluff. The Ways To Wealth
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Honest reviews of tools and side-hustles that feel doable even if youâre riding the gig economy wave.
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Perfect for folks who want substance + a bit of sass.
 
Quick take: Bookmark this one and treat it like your âmoney-life manualâ.
2. Millennial Money
Tagline: âNext level personal finance.â Millennial Money
This site knows that you donât just want to survive, you want to thrive (and not disappear into spreadsheets for days).
Why youâll love it:
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Itâs built for the hustle-but-balanced life.
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Talks about using money (not just tracking it).
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Feels fresh, not full of boilerplate finance advice from 1995.
 
Quick take: Ideal when youâre thinking: âCool. I budget. Now what?â
3. Money Under 30
Founded in 2006 by David Weliver because he felt the finance world was ignoring young adults. Wikipedia
The site remains deeply rooted in giving younger folks real toolsânot just generic advice.
Why youâll love it:
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Focused on your exact age-bracket: debt, first job, building credit, side-hustles.
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Great for the âhelp, I just graduatedânow what?â phase.
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No pretense. Just real.
 
Quick take: Bookmark when youâre in transition... new job, new city, new big adult decision.
4. Family Money Adventure
Founded by Kevin Payne, Family Money Adventure takes a refreshingly real-world approach to money. Itâs not all spreadsheets and stock chartsâitâs about creating a financial plan that supports your actual life: travel, family, fun, and the occasional Target run that somehow costs $200. familymoneyadventure.com
Why youâll love it:
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Focuses on balancing living well with spending smart.
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Covers everything from budgeting and saving to travel hacking and family finance.
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Written in a conversational, story-driven tone that makes money feel approachableânot intimidating.
 
Quick take: Perfect for anyone who wants to live richly in every sense of the wordâwithout losing sight of financial goals.
5. Better Money Habits (by Bank of America)
A little different angle: created by a big bank, yes, but still solid, approachable, and especially relevant for younger folks. Their Gen Z guide is full of âjust getting startedâ stuff. Better Money Habits
Why youâll love it:
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Simple, clean, and approachable content (no finance speak required).
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Great for early careers, first credit cards, first budget.
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Good bridge between âIâm newâ and âIâm seriousâ.
 
Quick take: Use this when you want to build good habits before you dive deep.
TL;DR Quick Recap
| Site | Best For | Vibe | 
|---|---|---|
| The Ways To Wealth | Everyone who wants real, actionable advice | Practical + no-BS | 
| Millennial Money | Living now AND planning ahead | Balanced hustle | 
| Money Under 30 | Young adult life-stuff | Starter adulting | 
| The Balance | Deeper finance stuff + upgrades | Serious but not boring | 
| Better Money Habits | Beginners getting started | Friendly + foundational | 
Why This Matters for You (and FreeBudget)
Because youâre part of the Gen Z/Millennial crowd, hereâs some facts to drive it home:
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Financial literacy is lowest among Gen Z, with many only answering ~39 % of financial-literacy questions correctly. GFLEC
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Gen Z and Millennials lean heavily on digital and social-media sources for financial information. The Motley Fool+1
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So guess what? The site you find via a quick Google search, the post you click on Instagram, the blog you skim on your phone, they all matter.
Thus, bookmarking smart, trustworthy finance websites is one of the best first steps in building a money-smart life. 
And at FreeBudget, we believe those habits start with transparency and good tools. Combining these sites with a free budgeting app (hello, thatâs us đ) and a mindset of âletâs talk openly about moneyâ, thatâs the magic.
How to Use These Sites With FreeBudget
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Start with one goal. Open FreeBudget. Pick one site from above. Read ONE article.
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Apply an action. Did the article mention âtrack your spending first 30 daysâ? Do it in FreeBudget.
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Share with a friend. Slide a link in your group chat. Encourage your circle. Accountability wins.
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Loop back each month. Read a new article. Apply a new habit. Incremental wins > big leaps.
 
Final Thoughts
Choosing the right finance website is like picking the right playlist, you want it to vibe with you. These five hit that vibe for Gen Z and Millennials: smart, approachable, sometimes playful, always actionable. Use them alongside FreeBudgetâs free tool and transparent mindset and youâre building something real.
Because at the end of the day: money isnât just about numbers. Itâs about freedom, choices, what you want to do with your life. So letâs build it smart, together.
    

