Peek earns praise for its clean, purposeful design and intuitive flow that makes budgeting feel approachable. Reviewers highlight actionable spending insights and a stable, thoughtfully focused launch, with many excited about its potential to grow. However, adoption friction is real: some won’t connect bank accounts, and a few report browser issues (e.g., Brave iOS). The social sharing feature divides opinion—useful for collaboration to some, clunky or unnecessary to others. Overall, a promising, user-first finance coach that’s already helpful, with room to refine privacy, compatibility, and presentation.
Love the interface, the design, and the usefulness of it all. The team really found a USP and made it loveable. 😶🌫️
Wonderchat
Congrats for the launch! Super cool idea especially for younger adults and teens who are starting out and learning how to manage personal finances. Can't wait to see Peek grow!
Love the approach you're taking with Peek, especially making finance feel more human and less overwhelming. The idea of a "vibe check for your money" really sticks, i'm sure this will be a hit.
When you’re ready to start scaling or looking at how to roll out subscriptions effectively, I help apps with paid user acquisition and conversion optimization – making sure people not only try it but stick around and convert when the time comes.
If you’re ever looking for help growing Peek post-early access, feel free to DM me or reach out at ben@appixir.com. Would be happy to chat about next steps.
Congrats on the launch @sherry_jiang @yemyat & Peek Team!
Exactly. Financial apps often feel cold and confusing. In that sense, Peek seems like a really well-designed app.
By the way, do users need to manually enter each expense to use it? If it supports integration, which countries are currently supported?
Peek
@kay_arkain We currently support US with more countries coming soon: 🇨🇦 🇬🇧 🇩🇪 🇫🇷.
Really appreciate the human-centered approach you're taking here - the "vibe check for your money" metaphor is genuinely refreshing in the sea of sterile finance dashboards.
That said, I’m curious about a couple of things:
How proactive is Peek really? Many apps talk about "insights" or "nudges," but often those end up being glorified push notifications or generic weekly reports. What does proactive look like in Peek - is it context-aware, or more rule-based?
Is the Spotify Wrapped comparison meaningful beyond the analogy? Wrapped is fun because it captures personality through data - is Peek aiming to do something similarly reflective and emotionally engaging with finances, or is it more of a clever metaphor?
Also, requiring Plaid from day one limits early feedback to US-based users. I understand the rationale for needing historical data, but are there plans to offer a "demo" or “offline” mode so that international testers can explore the UX before launch?
Loving the tone of the copy - it avoids the usual patronizing finance-app voice. If you can keep the experience just as light and human in-product as in this write-up, that’s a real win.
Looking forward to trying it once international support lands!
Peek
@kamil_miniakhmetov Hey Kamil,
We're taking a more agentic and context-aware approach here. We try to pick insights that are generally contextually aware on a few things:
Your personal information (occupation, where you live, etc.)
Previous chat history (we've implemented a memory system) within Peek
Your financial goals
Tasks at hand
This allows us to tell Peek agent about you and to finetune its responses based on it.
The spotify wrapped style visualization is actually generated by the agent based on the above context so it's definitely personalized by data.
If you're keen to try, please DM me on X. I can help you get onboarded with seeded demo data to try.
Are you planning to let users manually add custom expenses or cash transactions that Plaid can't track?