Budge (Kresus) vs HyperSwitch

TaglineSelf-hosted personal finance manager with automatic bank sync and rich analyticsOpen payment switch — route traffic across 50+ processors with one API
CategoryFinance & BudgetingFinance & Budgeting
ReplacesMint, YNABQuickBooks, Mint
GitHub stars90043k
LanguageTypeScriptDocker
LicenseMITApache-2.0
Self-host difficulty
2/5
Easy
4/5
Involved
Deploy options
Docker
Manual
Docker
Docker Compose
Kubernetes
Manual
Managed hosting
Last updated1 month ago5 days ago
View repoView repo

Where each falls short

The honest trade-offs — what you give up with each, versus the proprietary tools they replace.

Budge (Kresus)
  • Bank sync via Woob covers mainly French and European banks
  • Not suitable for invoicing or business accounting
  • Smaller community means fewer community importers for exotic banks
HyperSwitch
  • Focused on payment routing, not personal or business accounting/budgeting
  • Self-hosted setup requires PostgreSQL, Redis, and Kafka; operational overhead is high
  • PCI-DSS compliance responsibility shifts entirely to the operator
  • No built-in invoicing, expense tracking, or financial reporting beyond payment analytics

Bottom line

Choose Budge (Kresus) if you want the lower-effort setup; choose HyperSwitch for the larger community and ecosystem. HyperSwitch has seen more recent development. Open each guide below for deploy steps and the full feature gap.

Budge (Kresus)

Self-hosted personal finance manager with automatic bank sync and rich analytics

HyperSwitch

Open payment switch — route traffic across 50+ processors with one API