The average household underestimates its subscription spend by more than half. Add yours up in 60 seconds — most people find $200–600/year they forgot they were paying.
Add each one and its monthly price. Tap a common service to add it fast.
You don't need to cancel everything — just stop paying for what you don't use.
Check your bank + card statements and app-store subscriptions for the last 3 months. The ones you forgot are the expensive ones — annual renewals and free trials that started charging.
Sort each into three piles. "Haven't used in 30 days" = cancel. Duplicates (three music apps, two cloud storages) = keep one. Seasonal = pause.
Cancel the moment you decide — "later" is how another year slips by. Set a calendar reminder for anything you paused so it can't quietly renew.
A subscription-tracker app connects to your accounts, finds every recurring charge automatically, and can cancel the ones you pick — worth it if the calculator surprised you.
When asked to guess, people estimate about half their real subscription spend. The gap is the forgotten trials, annual renewals, and "just $9.99" services that add up.
Roughly 20–30% of subscriptions are paid for but rarely opened — or duplicated across services you already have. That's the fastest money to reclaim.
$40/month of unused subscriptions is nearly $2,400 over five years — before you count the price hikes that quietly land every renewal.
Where to look, what to keep, and how to cancel the 30 most common subscriptions.
It varies widely, but surveys consistently show people spend far more than they estimate — often $200–600/year of it on services they don't actively use. The calculator above gives you your own real number instead of an average.
It's completely free and requires no sign-up. Your subscription entries never leave your browser — there's no account and nothing is sent to a server.
Scan the last 3 months of bank and credit-card statements for recurring charges, then check your Apple App Store and Google Play subscription lists (they hide in-app purchases you set up years ago). The free checklist walks through every place to look.
Cancel anything you haven't opened in 30 days, keep one of each duplicate (one music app, one cloud storage), and switch annual plans on for the services you're sure about — annual is usually 15–20% cheaper than monthly.
If the calculator surprised you and you don't want to hunt through statements, a subscription-tracker app can find and cancel recurring charges automatically. If you're organized, the free checklist does the same job for $0.