NerdWallet's top 10 neighbors span podcasts, activism organizations, authors, politicians, and a fellow finance brand — with no single entity pulling far ahead of the rest.
The shape is flat: scores run from 0.93 (Marketplace) down to 0.92 (Tom Perez), a spread of just 0.008 across all ten positions. Mint (Intuit) is the only other Finance subcategory entry in the top 10, at 0.93. Beyond that one peer, the cluster is almost entirely cross-kind. Meena Harris (0.93, Professionals) and Everytown (0.92, Activism) sit alongside Amanda Gorman (0.92, Authors) and NPR's Planet Money (0.92, Podcasts and Radio). Fast Company (0.92, Magazines), Pew Research Center (0.92, Research Organizations), TED Talks (0.92, Education), and Tom Perez (0.92, Politicians) round out the set. Tallying subcategories: Podcasts and Radio and Magazines each contribute one entry in the top 10, while Professionals, Authors, Activism, Politicians, Research Organizations, and Education each contribute one. The mix reads as civically engaged, information-oriented audiences — public radio listeners, policy-adjacent professionals, and readers of ideas-driven media — rather than a finance-specific cluster.
The flat shape and cross-kind composition together suggest NerdWallet's audience is defined less by financial interest alone and more by a broader orientation toward informed, civic, and professional content.