Show HN: Peek – an AI "Spotify wrapped" for your money

8 sherryyjiang48 7 5/5/2025, 2:02:53 PM apps.apple.com ↗
hey hn –

mint is gone, the clones feel like bloatware, and afaict every “personal finance” app still assumes you love staring at pie charts for fun. i don’t.

so i built peek.

- ai-first: an ai agent does the number-crunching and pings you with bite-sized nudges instead of guilt-trips

- habit loop > dashboard: get weekly “wrapped”-style digests that actually push you towards forming new positive habits, not just remind you you spent too much on coffee

- mobile-only rn (ios) bc that’s where gen z actually lives

link: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/peek-ai-personal-finance-app/i...

would love honest feedback – performance, ux, skeptical takes, whatever. tear it apart. i’ll be here in the thread.

Comments (7)

whitefables · 4h ago
The interface looks really refreshing. Curious if a US bank account is needed?
askivan · 15h ago
I like the idea that Peek is using AI to help people manage their spend.

But spend management is a very heavily contested "wedge". I'm curious to see if it can be a little more goal-driven.

Like nudging people towards investing better, or helping people navigate different credit card loyalty programs to maximise cashback, miles and other rewards etc.

For instance, donotpay/Ramp justifies it's value because people can actually see it saving money for them regularly so it's sticky.

sherryyjiang48 · 15h ago
yah i know a lot of ppl have tried to tackle spend management as a problem, and some of the issues have been cognitive load and stickiness

- ppl often see just a lot of numbers and don't know what to do next about them - just knowing what is going on doesn't always translate well to the habits

ivanleomk · 15h ago
Peek has a great interface, excited to check it out! I think IOS is probably the right platform for these small nudges because otherwise I will not access my website haha
jeffyemyat · 15h ago
thanks ivan. appreciate you giving Peek a spin
agrims · 15h ago
been poking at peek since it hit product of the day on product hunt and it’s a surprisingly polished riff on “ai money coach.” the pitch is simple: plaid-powered account link, background llm crunching, then short proactive check-ins that feel more like duolingo streaks than mint spreadsheets .

what lands for me:

- timing & tone. the app pings right around my daily spend spike, but the copy is chill, no guilt trips. tiny behavior nudges > big budget sermons.

- wrapped-style recap. one weekly snapshot scratches the “am i normal?” itch without burying me in csv exports.

- speed. built with expo + react-native; ui feels buttery on ios, good sign they sweated performance early.

stuff that’ll make or break them:

- trust layer. plaid tokenization is table-stakes, but users will still side-eye a brand-new ai app asking for full ledger access. transparent threat-model write-up would help. they do say that none of the data is stored or meant to be public.

- monetization path. it’s free today; the moment paywalls pop, retention will hinge on how much real automation they ship vs just insights.

- privacy optics. venmo learned the hard way that public money feeds get creepy fast. peek leans private now; hope they keep it that way.

overall: if you hate manual budgeting but like fintech dopamine, peek’s worth a spin. while it is slowly replacing the google sheets budget i still back up every month, it already lives on my homescreen - more than i can say for most gen-z finance toys. curious to see if they grow into a self-driving wallet or plateau at “spotify wrapped for money.”

sherryyjiang48 · 15h ago
thanks for adding your thoughts here. you make great points around some of the risks - trust layer: we only utilize trusted 3rd party services like Plaid when it comes to the open-banking APIs. on our side, the data is encrypted in rest and in transit. we do not sell your data as part of our business, and we take it very seriously - monetization: yah right now Peek is free at the earlier stage because we're prioritizing growing our user base and rapidly improving our engagement features as well. eventually, we'll look to land on a subscriptions model