GnuCash allows you to track bank accounts, stocks, income, and expenses. As quick and intuitive to use as a checkbook register, it is based on professional accounting principles to ensure balanced books and accurate reports. It is backed by an active development community and is blossoming into a full-fledged accounting system.
| Tags | Office/Business Financial Accounting Internet Web Browsers Investment |
|---|---|
| Licenses | GPL |
| Operating Systems | POSIX |
| Implementation | C Scheme Perl |
Recent releases


Release Notes: This release improves message printed on screen and fixes various spellings in comments and translatable strings.


Release Notes: Several bugs have been fixed and translations were updated.


Release Notes: Several bugs have been fixed and translations were updated.


Release Notes: Several bugs have been fixed and translations were updated.


Release Notes: Port to Microsoft Windows was completed. SWIG is now used instead of g-wrap for providing language bindings. The Scheduled Transaction list view is now improved and summarized more compactly. The Since-Last-Run dialog has been simplified. Check printing has been improved, with new formats and simpler format descriptions. Automatic saving of the data file was added.
Recent comments
28 Nov 2011 16:35
I've been using GnuCash for a little over a year now, couldn't be happier.
15 Nov 2008 21:55
performace problems
This is just an initial impression, after migrating my wife's Quicken data to GnuCash, but I'm really disappointed in GnuCash's performance. It takes a minute and 20 seconds to start up, which is a couple of orders of magnitude longer than I'd consider good, and an order of magnitude longer than I'd consider reasonable.
15 Nov 2005 08:22
nice to see 1.8.12! :)
it's been so long, i'm afraid i'd more or less thought
gnucash had been abandoned.
18 Jan 2002 00:08
Re: Gnome required?
It requires the dependencies, but you can use it on any window manager or desktop.
17 Jan 2002 19:12
Gnome required?
The website says that Gnome is required to run GnuCash, is this really true? I run fvwm2, and run plenty of Gnome apps. I want to give GnuCash a shot, but I don't want to have to change my window manager just for this.