FAQs

Q: What is Booster Financial?

Booster is a budgeting app built with military discipline at its core. Instead of handing you a generic percentage rule or a static spreadsheet template, it uses AI to look at your actual income, your real pay cycle, and how you genuinely spend, then builds a plan around that specific picture. As your paycheck changes or your spending shifts, the plan moves with you instead of locking you into a fixed structure that stops matching your life after month one. The goal isn’t just tracking what already happened, it’s putting real breathing room back into your paycheck before it’s gone. Get paid. Stay paid.

Q: When do I get access?

Booster is currently in beta, and we’re bringing people on gradually rather than opening the doors all at once. Joining the waitlist puts you in line, and we’ll reach out directly by email the moment a spot opens up for you. There’s no fixed date we can promise right now, we’d rather tell you the truth than give you a deadline we can’t hit. In the meantime, feel free to reply to any of our emails with questions, we read every one.

Q: What makes Booster different from just tracking my spending in an app like Rocket Money?

Most budgeting apps, Rocket Money included, are built around one thing: showing you a chart of money you already spent. That’s useful for looking backward, but it doesn’t actually change what happens with your next paycheck. Booster works differently. Its AI looks at your real pay cycle, your actual spending patterns, and how your life shifts month to month, then builds a budget around that specific picture, not a generic percentage rule everyone gets handed. As your situation changes, a new job, a move, a bigger bill, the plan adjusts with you instead of locking you into a fixed structure that quietly stops working. The difference isn’t reporting, it’s a plan that’s actually built for you and stays that way.

Q: How does Booster build my budget?

Booster starts by looking at three things: your income, your real pay cycle, and where your money actually goes today, not where a textbook says it should go. From there, it splits your paycheck into what you owe, what you need to cover essentials, and what’s genuinely left over to spend or save, all tailored to your specific numbers rather than a one-size-fits-all rule. No two people get the same plan, because no two people have the same paycheck, bills, or life. The result is a budget that reflects how you actually live, not a template you’re forced to bend yourself around.