Self-hosted collaborative SQL editor for teams
Turns saved SQL queries into authenticated API endpoints instantly.
Self-hosted open-source personal finance expense and budget tracker with balances, transfers, and multi-currency reporting on Postgres.
SQL API for AI agents, but YNAB and Monarch Money already handle AI-assisted finance.
Individuals managing personal finances, AI agent developers integrating financial data
YNAB · Monarch Money · Copilot for Personal Finance
It started when I was 19 and ran my first company. I had no idea what I was doing with money, so I found an experienced financial advisor who sat me down and showed me how companies actually do budgeting. Where money goes, how much you're spending, what income to expect. Basic stuff, but nobody had explained it to me before. I just started applying the same approach to my personal finances and never stopped.
Once a week I sit down, drop my bank statements into an AI agent, and it parses everything — categorizes transactions, inserts them into the database, checks that balances match across accounts. If something doesn't add up, it asks me before fixing it.
I tried a bunch of apps over the years — CoinKeeper, ZenMoney, spreadsheets. They all worked to some degree. But the one thing I couldn't find anywhere was the ability to just hand an API key to an AI agent and let it read, write, and modify my financial data however it wants. Every app wants you to click through its UI and use its import flow. I wanted SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE through a simple HTTP API that any LLM can call.
So I built it. During a vacation. Was supposed to rest, but I couldn't stop once I started. Migrated all my data from ZenMoney and never looked back.
The main view is a budget table. Past months show actual numbers — what I really spent and earned. The current month has both actuals and the plan side by side, so I can see how I'm tracking. Future months are pure plan — expected income, expected expenses, projected balances. Everything sums up across categories and months, so I can see at a glance whether I can afford a big purchase three months from now or if I need to cut something. It's basically how companies do financial planning, but for one person.
Under the hood it's Next.js 16 with TypeScript on top of Postgres 18. Row Level Security enforced at the database layer — not in the app code. API keys are SHA-256 hashed, plaintext is never stored. Exchange rates fetched daily from five sources (ECB, CBR, NBS, NBU, plus a USDT peg). Locally everything runs in Docker Compose — Postgres, migrations, web app, FX worker. For production there's a full AWS CDK stack with ECS Fargate, RDS, ALB + Cognito auth, and WAF. The whole thing is about 9 tables and a view — kept it flat on purpose so LLMs don't get confused.
If you're into security — please try to break it. My real financial data is in there. I can't do a formal bug bounty, I'm one person. But if you get my data, I'll buy you a pizza and a beer.
Happy to answer questions about the architecture. Feature requests welcome too.
Turns saved SQL queries into authenticated API endpoints instantly.
Voice input for budgets is nice, but Mint and Copilot already solve this.
Local model gathers context so frontier models don't burn cash on mechanical search loops.
Yet another manual finance tracker in a sea of Mint and YNAB clones.
SQL queries over Claude/Copilot agent data; clever parsing, but tiny audience.
Reserve-commit lifecycle blocks agent actions before execution, unlike standard rate limiters.