Annual financial checkup — track assets, liabilities, and net worth over time
Year Snapshot
▼Income$0
Source
Annual ($)
▼Cash & Savings$0
Account
Balance ($)
Liquid
▼Tax-Free Investments$0
Account
Balance ($)
Liquid
▼Tax-Deferred Investments$0
Account
Balance ($)
Liquid
▼Taxable Investments$0
Account
Balance ($)
Liquid
▼Property$0
Asset
Value ($)
Liquid
▼Liabilities$0
Debt
Balance ($)
Import / Export
▶Notes Browser
Enter your financial data on the left to see your net worth analysis.
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Net Worth
$0
▼Summary
Total Assets
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Debt-to-Asset Ratio
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Total Liabilities
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Liquid Assets
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Net Worth
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Liquid Savings Rate
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▼Balance Sheet
▼Tax Bucket Breakdown
▼Asset Breakdown
Assets
Liabilities
▼Year-over-Year Changes
▼Growth Velocity
Savings Rate by Year
▼Net Worth Timeline
Your Annual Net Worth Checkup: Track Every Asset and Liability
Net worth is the single most important number in personal finance. It's the sum of everything you own minus everything you owe — and tracking it once a year tells you whether you're actually moving forward. Income alone doesn't tell the story: someone earning $200K with $300K in debt is in a worse position than someone earning $80K with $150K in investments and no debt.
Not all assets are equal, either. A dollar in a Roth IRA is worth more than a dollar in a Traditional 401(k) because the Roth dollar is already taxed — you keep 100% when you withdraw it. This tracker breaks down your investments by tax bucket (tax-free, tax-deferred, and taxable) so you can see the real composition of your wealth, not just the headline number.
What to Track — and What to Skip
Include anything with a clear, verifiable value: bank accounts, retirement accounts (401k, IRA, HSA), taxable brokerage accounts, real estate (use your best estimate of market value), vehicles, and all debts (mortgage, student loans, car loans, credit cards). Skip things that are hard to value or unlikely to be converted to cash — unvested stock options, future Social Security benefits, and personal belongings like furniture or clothing.
Using the Year-over-Year Delta
The most useful part of annual tracking isn't the snapshot — it's the delta. The year-over-year change view shows exactly which categories grew, which shrank, and by how much. You might discover that your retirement accounts grew $40K while your cash barely moved — a sign that investment returns are doing the heavy lifting. Or you might see liabilities dropping faster than expected because you made extra payments on a loan. These patterns only emerge when you compare years side by side.
Here's what the tracker includes:
10 pre-loaded years (2017-2026) with standard account categories ready to fill in
Tax bucket bar showing the split between tax-free, tax-deferred, and taxable assets
Year-over-year delta grid with dollar and percentage changes by category
Balance sheet view in traditional accounting format (assets left, liabilities right)
Growth velocity chart showing your net worth growth rate and savings rate over time
CSV and XLS export for backup or further analysis
Two sample data profiles (single earner, family) to see the tool in action