Skip to main content

Best Apps for Managing Multiple Investment Accounts in 2026

Last updated: March 21, 2026

TLDR

Managing a 401(k), Roth IRA, taxable brokerage, and maybe crypto across multiple institutions means logging into 3-5 separate apps. The best apps for aggregating multiple investment accounts are Thalvi (best for high-earning women), Kubera (best for complex/alternative asset portfolios), Empower (best free option), and Monarch Money (best for users who also want budget context).

Best Apps for Multiple Investment Accounts — 2026

Comparison of multi-account aggregation and analytics capability

AppAnnual CostAccount TypesAnalytics DepthEquity Comp
Thalvi$99Brokerage, retirement, equity compFull portfolio analyticsYes
Kubera$150All including crypto, RE, intlBalance + basicNo
EmpowerFreeBrokerage, retirement (US)Good (allocation, fees)No
Monarch Money$99.99All account typesBalance onlyNo
01

Thalvi

Investment-first wealth aggregator that consolidates multiple investment accounts into one dashboard. 401(k), Roth IRA, taxable brokerage, equity compensation accounts — tracked together with portfolio-level analytics rather than just balance aggregation. Designed for high-earning professionals who have accumulated accounts at multiple institutions.

Pros

  • ✓ Portfolio-level view across all connected investment accounts
  • ✓ Equity compensation tracking alongside standard investment accounts
  • ✓ Net worth and allocation analysis in one dashboard
  • ✓ No budget noise — purely investment-focused

Cons

  • × No free tier
  • × Some account connections may require manual entry while product develops
  • × Limited alternative asset coverage (crypto and real estate on roadmap)

Pricing: $9/month or $99/year

Verdict: Best for high-earning women with multiple US investment accounts plus equity compensation. Portfolio analytics are first-class rather than bolted on.

02

Kubera

The most comprehensive multi-account tracker for portfolios that include alternative assets. If you have a 401(k) and Roth IRA plus Coinbase crypto and real estate equity and maybe an international account, Kubera is the only consumer app that handles all of them cleanly.

Pros

  • ✓ Handles every account type: traditional, crypto, real estate, international, private
  • ✓ Multi-currency support for international account holders
  • ✓ Net worth calculation includes the full picture — no accounts left out
  • ✓ Beneficiary access for multi-account estate planning

Cons

  • × Most expensive at $150/year
  • × Less deep analytics than Empower for traditional investment accounts
  • × Interface is functional but not polished
  • × No cash flow or spending tracking

Pricing: $150/year individual

Verdict: Best for portfolios that span traditional accounts, crypto, real estate, and international holdings. Breadth over analytical depth.

03

Empower

Free dashboard for aggregating multiple investment accounts with genuine analytics. Portfolio allocation view, investment fee analyzer, and retirement planning calculator work across all connected accounts. Business model is converting free users to 0.89% AUM advisory clients.

Pros

  • ✓ Free — no cost to aggregate multiple investment accounts
  • ✓ Portfolio allocation across all connected accounts
  • ✓ Investment fee analyzer works across all holdings
  • ✓ Retirement readiness calculator accounts for all connected accounts

Cons

  • × Advisor solicitations scale with portfolio visibility — connecting more accounts increases upsell frequency
  • × No equity compensation tracking
  • × No alternative asset support beyond manual entry

Pricing: Free dashboard

Verdict: Best free option for aggregating multiple US investment accounts. Portfolio analytics across all connected accounts are genuinely useful.

04

Monarch Money

Budget app that includes investment account aggregation in the net worth view. For users who want to see their 401(k), brokerage, and checking account all in one place alongside budget tracking, Monarch provides that combined view. Investment analysis is balance aggregation only.

Pros

  • ✓ All account types visible in one place — investment alongside banking
  • ✓ Reliable sync for all major institutions
  • ✓ Net worth trending over time
  • ✓ Good for users who want budget context alongside investment balances

Cons

  • × Investment tracking is balance aggregation — no analytics across accounts
  • × Budget-first architecture means investment view is secondary
  • × No equity compensation, crypto wallet, or alternative asset support

Pricing: $99.99/year or $14.99/month

Verdict: Works for seeing multiple account balances in one place. Doesn't provide investment analytics across those accounts — right for users who also want budget management alongside account aggregation.

Looking for something built for investors?

Thalvi is From $9/month — no budgeting required, all accounts in one view.

The Multi-Account Problem

A high earner in their 30s or 40s often has more investment accounts than they intended to accumulate:

  • 401(k) at current employer
  • Old 401(k) from a previous employer they haven’t rolled over
  • Roth IRA opened years ago
  • Taxable brokerage account at a different institution
  • Employee stock purchase plan account at Fidelity or Schwab
  • Maybe an HSA with an investment component
  • Maybe some crypto on an exchange

Logging into each of these separately to understand the combined picture is the kind of inefficiency that a wealth aggregation app is designed to solve. The question is which apps handle the full picture well.

The Aggregation vs. Analytics Distinction

All four apps in this comparison aggregate multiple investment accounts — they all connect to major brokerages and show you a combined balance.

The differentiation is whether that aggregation comes with analytics.

Balance aggregation: App connects to your Fidelity 401(k) and Schwab brokerage and shows you $240,000 + $115,000 = $355,000. You know your total investment account value.

Portfolio analytics: App connects both accounts and shows $355,000 total, 68% US equity / 22% international / 10% bonds, expense ratio averaging 0.18%, and a retirement readiness projection based on contribution rate and time horizon. You know your total value AND whether it’s appropriately invested.

Empower and Thalvi provide the analytics layer across multiple accounts. Kubera shows the balance picture across the broadest asset classes. Monarch shows balances.

The Equity Compensation Account Problem

High earners at major companies often have a fifth or sixth account type: an equity compensation account. RSUs that vest quarterly, ESPPs with purchase periods, stock options with expiration dates — these are financial assets that require tracking alongside the investment accounts.

Most apps handle equity compensation poorly. They can connect to equity plan administrators (Fidelity NetBenefits stock plan accounts, Schwab Stock Plan Services, Morgan Stanley Shareworks) and show a current balance. They don’t show vesting schedules, grant details, or the tax implications of different exercise or sale timing.

For users with $50,000-$300,000 in unvested RSUs, this is a meaningful gap in the financial picture. Thalvi is designed to address equity compensation as a first-class feature alongside traditional investment accounts.

The Old 401(k) Problem

An underserved use case in multi-account management: the old 401(k) sitting at a former employer.

Many high earners have a 401(k) from a previous employer that they haven’t rolled into their current plan or an IRA. It sits there, accumulating returns but not getting attention. The fund selection from 2017 may not be optimal. The contribution match from that employer is long gone, but the account is still there.

Finance apps that aggregate multiple accounts make this account visible alongside current accounts — you can see the old 401(k)‘s allocation and performance alongside your current employer’s plan and make informed decisions about whether to roll it over or leave it in place.

Practical Multi-Account Setup

When setting up a multi-account investment tracker:

  1. List all accounts first — 401(k)s, IRAs, brokerage accounts, HSA, equity plans, crypto. The list is often longer than you expect.

  2. Connect major institutions during trial — test that all your specific accounts connect reliably before committing to a subscription.

  3. Handle manual entries for unsupported accounts — smaller brokerages and some international accounts may need manual entry. Account for this in your evaluation.

  4. Verify equity compensation connections — if you have RSUs or ESPPs, test that the app connects to your specific equity plan administrator.

Q&A

What is the best app for tracking a 401(k), Roth IRA, and brokerage account together?

For users with standard US investment accounts (401k, Roth IRA, taxable brokerage), Empower's free dashboard provides good portfolio-level analytics across all connected accounts. For users who want investment analytics designed for high-earning professionals without an advisory upsell model, Thalvi at $99/year provides portfolio tracking and equity compensation support. Monarch Money aggregates all account types but provides balance-only investment tracking without analytics.

Q&A

Can you track a 401(k) without logging in separately?

Yes. Most major 401(k) plan administrators connect to finance apps via Plaid. Fidelity NetBenefits, Vanguard, Empower Retirement, T. Rowe Price, and Schwab are among the most reliably connected. After initial setup, your 401(k) balance updates automatically in Thalvi, Empower, Kubera, and Monarch Money without requiring a separate login. Some smaller plan administrators have variable connection support — manual entry is the fallback.

Q&A

What is the best app for tracking crypto alongside traditional investment accounts?

Kubera is the most capable mainstream app for combining crypto with traditional investment accounts. It connects to major exchanges (Coinbase, Binance, Kraken) and supports direct crypto wallet connections alongside standard US brokerage and retirement accounts. Empower connects to some crypto exchanges but doesn't support direct wallet connections. Monarch Money and Thalvi have limited or roadmap-stage crypto support.

See your full financial picture

How many investment accounts can I connect to these apps?
All apps in this comparison support unlimited account connections — there is no cap on the number of brokerage, retirement, or bank accounts you can connect. The practical limit is which institutions the app's data aggregation service supports. Major US institutions (Fidelity, Vanguard, Schwab, E*TRADE, TD Ameritrade) connect reliably across all apps.
Does connecting multiple accounts create security risks?
Finance apps connect to your accounts using read-only access via bank-permissioned data sharing (Plaid and similar services). The connection is read-only — apps can view balances and transactions but cannot initiate transfers or modify accounts. Plaid uses OAuth authentication at major institutions, meaning you authenticate directly with your bank rather than providing credentials to the app. The primary security practice is using apps that use Plaid or similar regulated aggregation services rather than credential storage.
What happens when I change brokerage accounts?
When you move accounts — closing a Fidelity brokerage and opening at Schwab, for example — you add the new account connection in the app and remove the old one. Most apps maintain historical data for closed connections within the subscription period. The process takes a few minutes per account.

Keep reading