app to track mutual fund performance

April 18, 2026by Mindcrate Team

An App for Tracking Mutual Funds

That spreadsheet is where your investment goals go to die. You know it. I know it. Your clunky, manually-updated Excel file has to go.

A good tracking app does more than show you a balance. It should automatically pull everything together to give you a clear view of your asset allocation, expose the hidden fees eating your returns, and show you how youโ€™re actually doing against the market.

I remember sitting in my 2011 Honda Civic at 4:17 PM, frantically trying to update a monster of a spreadsheet on my phone before the market closed. I had a dozen tabs for different funds, manual entries for dividends, and a formula I barely trusted. It was a mess.

That was the day I switched.

What to look for in a tracking app

Forget the flashy interfaces. A good tracker only needs to do three things well:

  1. Pull all your accounts into one place. If you have a 401(k) here and a Roth IRA there, you need to see it all on one dashboard. Otherwise, youโ€™re just guessing.
  2. Show you the fees. This is the big one. Most investors have no idea what they're paying in expense ratios. An app that can scan your funds and show you, "You will pay $47,000 in fees over the next 20 years," is a wake-up call. It might be the most important feature for long-term growth.
  3. Benchmark your performance. Is your fund actually beating the S&P 500? Or are you paying a manager for mediocre results? You need to see how your investments stack up against the right benchmarks.
Time Value Your Portfolio Benchmark (S&P 500)

Don't just track. Think.

The danger of seeing your numbers all the time is that you might be tempted to do something. Checking your portfolio constantly leads to emotional, short-sighted moves. This isn't day trading; it's about building a calm habit of oversight.

I actually use a habit tracker called Trider to manage the routine itself. It's not a financial app. But it lets me schedule a once-a-month portfolio review, block out distractions for an hour, and just focus on my asset allocation. It turns that panicked, reactive checking into a scheduled, deliberate process.

Other things that are nice to have

The good apps usually get a few other things right. Look for an interface that doesn't feel like a tax form. It should give you real information on any fundโ€”its top holdings, the manager's history, everything. Some can even analyze your portfolio and suggest trades to get you back to your target allocation. And if you can trade within the app, it obviously needs to be secure.

Some apps try to do it all, while others specialize. Moneycontrol and myCAMS are popular choices with a lot of tracking features. But the specific app you choose matters less than just picking one and getting started. Link your accounts, and set a time to actually look at what itโ€™s telling you. Maybe just once a month.

Free on Google Play

This article is a map.
Trider is the vehicle.

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ยฉ 2026 Mindcrate ยท Written for the people who Googled this at 2AM