Bill tracking built for couples who keep money separate. Bridge handles the transfer math, the settle-up math, and the why-was-the-bill-higher math — automatically. With an AI that actually knows your household.
Most couples keep some money separate. Most apps assume you don't. So every month becomes the same back-and-forth: who paid what, how much to move to joint, what's a fair settle-up, why this month felt tighter than last. Bridge handles it — quietly, in the background, with the math always right.
"How much do I move to the joint account this month?" Bridge tells you the exact number — for each of you — based on what's actually billed.
When one of you covers a shared bill from a personal account, Bridge tracks it. At month's end: one number, one direction, done.
Bridge watches your usage patterns and flags the unusual. "Your water bill is 38% higher than the 12-month average — worth a look."
Snap a photo of any bill. Claude reads the vendor, amount, and due date and drops it into your tracker. The spreadsheet workflow, minus the spreadsheet.
"What if we dropped Hulu and Apple TV?" "What if the power bill goes up 15%?" Bridge models it against your real history in a single line.
A short, plain-English read at the end of each month — what changed, what to watch, and what Bridge would do about it. Built on years of your actual household data.
Two paychecks, two personal accounts, one shared life and one shared pile of bills. Bridge is built for that exact arrangement — not joined finances, not solo budgeting, not "your money / my money" guesswork.
You both have your own checking account. You both contribute to joint. Bills get paid from a mix of all three. Bridge keeps it fair, automatically — and explains the why when you want it.
If everything goes into one pot, you don't need Bridge — you need a budgeting app. We're the bridge between two accounts, deliberately.
Bridge is in active development. The first version ships soon. If you and your partner are tired of the spreadsheet, drop a line.
Sales@HoebTech.com →