How CashBinder works
CashBinder is a personal finance dashboard for people who want one clear place to follow net worth, monthly income, crypto wallets, assets, currency conversions, and future projections. The goal is not to make financial decisions for you. The goal is to organize your numbers so you can understand them faster.
The basic idea
Most personal finance tools become confusing because they mix several different questions into one screen. CashBinder separates them. Net worth answers “what do I own right now?” The compounder answers “what could this become if my assumptions are correct?” The currency converter answers “what does this amount mean in another currency?” The monthly plan answers “what changed this month?”
This structure is useful because a higher number is not always real progress. Your portfolio may increase because the exchange rate changed, because you added salary, because Bitcoin moved, or because an asset was revalued. When those effects are separated, the dashboard becomes easier to read.
1. Track current worth
List bank balances, crypto wallets, and assets. Keep names clear and values updated. The dashboard then gives you a single current-worth number.
2. Project carefully
Use the compounder for scenarios, not promises. Small changes in monthly return, starting amount, or added contributions can change the result dramatically.
3. Convert currencies
If you live between currencies, the converter helps you compare USD, EUR, UAH, and BTC without doing the math manually each time.
4. Review monthly
The monthly plan is for habits. It helps you notice whether wealth is rising from contributions, investment gains, or one-off income.
Why the dashboard is private by design
Personal finance data can be sensitive. A finance dashboard should be simple, direct, and easy to understand. CashBinder focuses on the numbers you enter and the calculations you request. The legal and privacy pages explain the public website, cookies, and advertising technologies, while your dashboard remains the tool.
How to use it responsibly
Start with conservative numbers. Use rounded estimates for assets that are hard to price. Avoid counting the same thing twice, such as listing the same crypto balance under both a wallet and an exchange. Review your values on a schedule, such as weekly or monthly, instead of changing them emotionally every time the market moves.