Use Cases
Real-life saving situations — without awkward money conversations.

Couples saving together
Sarah and Dan want to save for a down payment on a house.
They both work and want to contribute fairly.
Money conversations become tense when it's unclear who contributed what.
Pool shows each contribution clearly, so both can save together without pressure.


Friends saving for a trip
A group of five friends wants to take a trip to Japan next year. They've talked about it for months but haven't made progress.
Everyone agrees on the trip, but progress stalls and no one knows if it's actually happening.
Pool turns the trip into a shared goal with visible progress, so plans actually move forward.


Roommates managing shared expenses
Three roommates share ongoing expenses like groceries, utilities, and household items.
One person often pays upfront, and tracking who owes what becomes awkward and unclear.
as part of an ongoing shared goal or monthly pool, Pool brings all shared expenses together and shows clearly who owes what — and to whom.


Individuals saving alone

Jamie wants to save for a new laptop, a weekend trip, and an emergency fund. They have multiple goals at once.
Money sits in one account, and it's hard to know what's actually saved for what.
Pool separates goals into clear pools, so you always know what your money is for. Each goal has its own pool, so progress feels tangible — not abstract.
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