Subscription Audit
List everything you pay for on repeat. We'll add it up, rank it, and show you the quiet money-drains — all on your device, nothing saved.
Tip: the goal isn't to cancel everything — it's to see the real yearly cost so you can keep what you actually use and drop what you don't.
How to audit your subscriptions
It's easy to lose track of recurring payments — a forgotten free trial that started charging, a streaming service you barely use, a gym you've stopped going to. This tool adds them all up, converts weekly, monthly and yearly costs onto the same footing, and ranks them so you can see the real annual total in one place.
The two things that quietly drain money are small subscriptions (the under-£5-a-month ones that feel trivial but stack up) and overlapping services (three or four streaming or music apps at once). Seeing the yearly figure makes it obvious which ones are worth keeping and which to cancel.
The audit runs entirely in your browser and nothing is saved. The goal isn't to cancel everything — it's to keep what you actually use and drop what you don't.
Frequently asked questions
How do I find all my subscriptions?⌄
Scan the last few months of bank and card statements for repeating payments, and check the subscriptions section of your App Store (iPhone) or Google Play (Android) account, where many sign-ups live.
How do I actually cancel a subscription?⌄
Cancel through the provider directly, or via the App Store/Google Play if you signed up there. Note that cancelling your card alone often doesn't stop a subscription — the company can still pursue the payment.
Why am I paying for subscriptions I forgot about?⌄
Usually free trials that auto-converted to paid, or gradual price rises you didn't notice. Auditing them once or twice a year is the simplest way to catch these.
Does cancelling subscriptions affect my credit?⌄
No. Cancelling a subscription has no impact on your credit score.
Is my financial data stored?⌄
No. Everything is calculated on your device and nothing is uploaded or saved.