See your whole financial life on one page
12 May 2026 · 3 min read

If you had to draw your finances right now, with every account, the super, the loan, the shares, and whatever entity your name sits inside, could you? Most people can't, and it isn't a failing. Financial life arrives in fragments: a super statement here, a loan portal there, a share account you log into twice a year. Each piece makes sense on its own. The shape of the whole thing never quite comes into focus.
Wealth Architect exists to fix that one specific problem. You drag a tile onto a canvas for each real thing you have: yourself, your bank accounts, your property, your share portfolio, your insurance. Then you connect them the way they actually relate. Within an hour you are looking at something you have probably never seen before: your own structure, in one picture.
The value is not the picture itself. It is what the picture lets you notice. People map their position and immediately spot an account no one is really watching, an insurance policy that lapsed, a loan sitting against the wrong asset, or a beneficiary that was never updated. None of that is visible in a stack of statements. All of it is obvious on a canvas. A one-click net worth view totals it across every account, super, share portfolio and property, household-wide and per-entity, so the bottom line stops living in your head.
It also changes the conversations you can have. When something does need an accountant or an adviser, you arrive with a clear map instead of a shoebox. They spend their time on advice, not on reconstructing what you already know. That tends to make professional help both faster and cheaper.
Wealth Architect does not give advice and it does not predict anything. It will not tell you to buy or sell, and it will not invent numbers you did not enter. It shows you what is true right now, clearly. For a lot of people, that clarity is the thing that has been missing.
You can map your own position in an afternoon, and it is free during the beta. The hardest part is starting, and starting is just one tile.