iCash will then allow you to find out where all your money comes from and where it goes. Simply create accounts for all your expenses, incomes, Banks. For this reason it doesn't use the principle of double-entry bookkeeping making it much easier to be used by people with very little or no accounting knowledge at all. With a few clicks you can begin creating accounts and making transactions in minutes. iCash can serve several small accounting needs for either private users, or clubs, associations, self-employed, small businesses or simply to be used at home, making keeping track of incomes, expenses and Banks transactions a snap. ICash is an easy-to-use, full featured and multi-purpose Personal Finance Manager tool for Macintosh and Windows intended to help you control all kinds of money issues. Your finances depends largely on good organization that lets you know where your money comes from and to where it goes. As simple as creating the accounts you need and move money between them! You don't even need to know about accounting or even care about it. ICash is a software intended to control your personal finance, keeping track of incomes, expenses, credits, debts and Banks transactions for you. We do not recommend this program there are many better options available. It installs and uninstalls without issues. ICash is free to try, but the trial version has a 100-transaction limit and a nag screen. ![]() ![]() Overall, we felt that iCash needlessly complicated something that other programs do in a much more intuitive way. The program comes with predefined expense categories, but there wasn't any obvious way to assign each transaction to a category. But once we'd imported our transactions, we weren't sure what the point was. The program does lets users import transactions from their banks, which is helpful and easy enough to do. But we've seen plenty of similar programs that are obvious right off the bat, and we're not sure there's anything particularly interesting about iCash that would make us want to put in the effort. The program comes with a 13-page Word document Help file, and it does seem that with careful studying a user could figure out how iCash works. However, the way that the program attempts to organize things-both accounts and transactions-doesn't always make sense. ICash's interface looks nice enough, with attractive buttons and tabs that organize its main features. Unfortunately, the program did not seem to bring either intuitiveness or outstanding features to the table, making it a pretty mediocre choice among similar programs. ![]() ICash bills itself as a simple program, a financial management tool for people who don't know anything about accounting.
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