Finmark was a genuinely good financial planning tool for startups, which is exactly why its shutdown stings. After BILL acquired it, the standalone product was sunset on April 1, 2026, and users lost access to their models. If you are rebuilding your financial planning somewhere new, here is an honest look at how Revenue Map covers what Finmark did, and where it does not.
Build my model, freeFinmark was acquired by BILL, and the standalone product was sunset on April 1, 2026. finmark.com now redirects to bill.com, and existing users have lost access to their models.
The jobs to cover, and how Revenue Map handles each one.
Revenue Map builds a full financial model from a short guided setup: revenue, costs, cash flow, and break-even, computed for you rather than assembled cell by cell.
Runway and burn rate are core outputs of every Revenue Map model, so you always know how long your cash lasts under current assumptions.
Every model comes with base, optimistic, and pessimistic scenarios generated automatically, so you can stress-test assumptions the way you did in Finmark.
Revenue Map produces an investor-ready PDF report, with unit economics (CAC, LTV, ROAS) and assumptions grounded in real market benchmarks.
Revenue Map is an independent product built for founders and staying for founders; serving this segment is the whole business, not a feature of a larger platform.
Revenue Map is a financial-modeling tool for founders. You answer a few questions and it builds an instant revenue and financial model, break-even, MRR/ARR, runway, unit economics (CAC, LTV, ROAS), and base/optimistic/pessimistic scenario analysis, all grounded in real market benchmarks, with an investor-ready PDF at the end. It supports subscription and e-commerce models and is free to start (paid Plus at $29/mo and Pro at $49/mo).
An honest look at what each tool covers.
| Feature | Revenue Map | Finmark |
|---|---|---|
| Status | Active, independent, founder-focused | Sunset April 1, 2026; site redirects to bill.com |
| Financial forecasting | Full revenue, cost, cash-flow, and break-even model | Was a core strength: driver-based financial planning |
| Runway & burn | Modeled explicitly in every project | Was a core strength |
| Scenario planning | Base, optimistic, and pessimistic scenarios automatically | Supported scenario planning |
| Market benchmarks | Real benchmarks by business model built into assumptions | Not a focus |
| Accounting integrations (actuals) | Not offered: Revenue Map models forward, it does not sync actuals | Integrated with accounting and payroll systems |
| Headcount planning | Team costs are modeled as expenses, without a dedicated hiring planner | Had a dedicated headcount planning module |
| Pricing | Free to start; Plus $29/mo, Pro $49/mo | No longer available at any price |
An alternative only helps if it fits. These are the honest gaps.
If Finmark was your forecasting, runway, and scenario tool, Revenue Map covers that job well and rebuilds your model faster than Finmark's own setup did: a short guided flow produces a computed model with benchmarks, three scenarios, unit economics, and an investor-ready PDF, free to start. Be honest with yourself about the gaps, though. If your Finmark workflow revolved around synced actuals or dedicated headcount planning, Revenue Map does not replace those, and a heavier FP&A platform is the better fit. For early-stage founders who mostly needed to know their runway, burn, and break-even, Revenue Map is a natural next home, and one whose entire business is serving founders.
See all Revenue Map comparisons or the best startup financial modeling tools.
Real benchmarks. Break-even, runway, unit economics, and an investor-ready report, free to start.
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