← March 22, 2026 edition

montty-finance

Make CFO-level decisions in seconds

Montty Wants to Be Your First Finance Hire. That's a High Bar.

Montty Wants to Be Your First Finance Hire. That's a High Bar.

The Macro: Everyone Wants to Sell You a CFO-in-a-Box

Every founder I know has the same relationship with their finances: avoidance, panic, avoidance, panic. The spreadsheet that was supposed to track burn rate hasn’t been touched since Q3. The accountant costs more than the software budget. The mental overhead alone is legitimately a productivity killer.

So there’s no shortage of tools trying to fix this. Pilot, Bench, Mercury’s built-in dashboards, Brex, Ramp, and a whole tier of AI-native newcomers I’ve spent too many hours looking at. The CFO software category has gotten genuinely crowded, partly because the underlying problem is real and partly because “AI CFO” is a pitch that writes itself right now.

The numbers back up why everyone is chasing this. Global fintech investment rebounded to $116 billion across 4,719 deals in 2025, according to KPMG. Fortune Business Insights projects the broader fintech market hitting $460 billion by 2026. There’s clearly money flowing toward whoever can credibly own the financial operations layer for small businesses and early-stage startups.

The interesting tension is that most founders don’t actually need a CFO. They need someone to tell them their runway, flag when something looks wrong, and make sure receipts don’t pile up in a shoebox. Those are related problems but they’re not the same product. Tools like Pigment and Brex are genuinely good but they’re also built for companies with finance teams. The solo founder or two-person startup is weirdly underserved relative to how loud the pitches are.

I’ve written before about how AI finance tools are threading this needle in adjacent ways, like what SuperMoney is doing with its AI layer and how DossierPrêt approaches financial clarity for individuals. The pattern is consistent: the interface problem is mostly solved, the trust problem is not.

The Micro: An AI CFO With Training Wheels (Not an Insult)

Montty is positioning itself squarely at founders, not finance teams. The tagline is “Finance for Founders. No Accounting Degree.” and the product design more or less matches that energy.

The core offering breaks into three pieces. First, AI receipt capture: you snap a photo, the app logs it, and reportedly saves you around five or more hours a week on bookkeeping. Second, a chat interface with what they call an AI CFO. You can ask plain English questions about runway, burn rate, or financial health and get answers without digging through a dashboard. Third, a Financial Health Score that tracks liquidity, efficiency, and solvency on a weekly basis.

That last one is actually interesting to me. A single score you can check the way you’d check a credit score is a real UX insight. Founders don’t want a financial dashboard. They want a number that tells them whether to worry.

The pricing is simple. Free tier covers receipt scanning, customer logging, primary metrics, and the health score. Pro is $24.99 a month and unlocks the AI CFO chat. There’s also a promo code floating around (MONTTY2026) for free Pro access, and they ran a Product Hunt special that made it free for everyone on launch day, where it got solid early traction.

The community angle is a secondary bet. They’re building a newsletter, a podcast, pitch deck templates, and financial models alongside the product. This is either a smart acquisition funnel or a distraction from making the core product excellent. Hard to tell yet.

What I can’t fully evaluate from the outside is how good the AI CFO actually is. Natural language finance queries are only useful if the answers are accurate and appropriately caveated. That’s where I’d spend my first hour with the product. The chat interface also feels a little like what I’d want Novi Notes to do if it pivoted into finance, which is to say: low-friction, no-config, just works.

The site also mentions “smooth customer logging” a few times, which is an odd phrase and slightly unclear whether this is invoicing, CRM-lite, or something else entirely.

The Verdict

Montty is early and it knows it. The features listed on the site are partly live and partly “coming soon,” which is honest but also means I’m evaluating a promise as much as a product.

The bet here is that founders want one tool that handles the basics instead of stitching together Expensify plus a bank dashboard plus a spreadsheet. That’s a reasonable bet. The Financial Health Score concept is genuinely the most interesting product decision they’ve made, because it translates complexity into something actionable.

What would make or break this at 90 days is whether the AI CFO chat is actually useful or just a glorified FAQ that sounds conversational. If founders ask “do I have enough runway to hire?” and get a real, data-grounded answer, that’s a product. If they get something vague, they’ll close the tab and not come back.

I’d also want to know more about the accounting integrations. Can this connect to QuickBooks, Xero, a bank feed? The website doesn’t make that clear, and for any finance tool, the data input story is everything.

The space is crowded, the pitch is familiar, but the specific founder-first framing and the health score hook are at least two things worth watching.