For dyslexic readers
Debt Tracker for Dyslexia — Plain English, Visual Progress, No Number Overload
Dyslexia and financial stress are often quietly connected. Money is mostly delivered as numbers and small text, which can be the exact combination that makes a brain step away from the screen.
Why visual tracking reduces reading load
Most finance apps lean on tables, lists and rows of figures. For dyslexic readers, each of those is a small tax: a moment of decoding, double-checking, and sometimes giving up and guessing. Across a whole dashboard, that tax adds up.
A visual bar that goes from full to two-thirds full doesn't need to be read. A wall that loses bricks doesn't need to be interpreted. The progress is the shape, not the digits.
How Veowe is designed for easier reading
Veowe uses calm, high-contrast typography, plenty of line spacing, and short sentences in plain English. There are no dense tables. APR and minimum-payment terms are explained in a single sentence rather than a glossary.
Simple mode is one tap away. It hides advanced numbers and shows you a single visual plus a single next step. See display and accessibility for the full list of choices.
What stays the same as you read more
Nothing important is hidden — the underlying numbers are still there whenever you want them. Veowe just doesn't make them the first thing on every screen.
Frequently asked questions
Why does dyslexia make money harder?
Dyslexia can make number-heavy interfaces tiring to read, especially when amounts, dates, percentages and small print are crowded together. The effort to parse a screen often becomes a reason to close it.
Does Veowe use a dyslexia-friendly font?
Veowe uses calm contrast, generous spacing and large clear typography. It avoids dense tables and tightly packed numbers wherever possible.
Can I hide numbers altogether?
Simple mode hides advanced numbers and shows you the visual plus the one next step. The numbers are still there if you need them — just not in your face.
