Stop paying for the same thing twice
Add your subscriptions. See which ones overlap. Decide what to keep and what to cancel.
Your subscription list
Enter each subscription you pay for. Include streaming, software, news, cloud storage, and memberships.
No subscriptions added yet. Use the form above or load a preset bundle to get started.
| Name | Cost/mo | Renews | Use | Status | Actions |
|---|
Overlap details
These are the categories where you have more than one subscription. Consider keeping only one per category.
Add at least two subscriptions in the same category to see overlap details here.
How to run a subscription audit
1. Gather your subscriptions
Check your bank statement, email inbox, and phone for recurring charges. Include free trials that are about to convert. Do not forget annual plans from last year.
2. Enter each one
Use the form above. For annual plans, divide the total by 12 and enter that as the monthly cost. Pick the primary use that best describes what you get from it.
3. Review the overlaps
The summary panel shows how many categories have duplicates. The overlap cards below explain which services compete with each other.
4. Decide and act
Mark each subscription as keep or cancel. Check the potential savings. Then go to each service and cancel the ones you do not need. Save this audit so you can compare next quarter.
Common mistakes
- Forgetting annual subscriptions that auto-renew.
- Ignoring family-plan rules. Some services let you share with household members at no extra cost.
- Not checking bundle deals. Your internet or phone plan might already include a streaming service.
- Canceling without checking for remaining prepaid time.
Family-plan sharing rules
Most streaming services allow one account per household. Some, like Spotify and YouTube Premium, offer dedicated family tiers for a higher monthly fee. Check each service's terms before assuming you can share. Sharing outside the household may violate terms of service.
Example overlap scenarios
Video streaming
You have Netflix, Hulu, and Disney+. You mostly watch originals on Netflix. Hulu and Disney+ overlap for general entertainment. Consider dropping one and rotating every few months instead of keeping all three year-round.
Cloud storage
You pay for iCloud, Google One, and Dropbox. All three store files in the cloud. Pick the one that fits your device ecosystem best and move everything there before canceling the others.
Music streaming
You have Spotify and Apple Music. Both give you access to the same catalog. Unless you need a feature unique to one (like Apple Music's lossless audio), one is enough.
Frequently asked questions
How do I handle annual subscriptions?
Divide the annual cost by 12 and enter that as the monthly cost. Set the renewal date to the next annual billing date. This keeps the comparison fair against monthly plans.
Can I share this audit with someone?
Use the Share Link button. It copies a URL with your audit data encoded in the link. The other person opens it and sees your list. No account needed.
What counts as an overlap?
Two services overlap when they cover the same primary use. For example, two music-streaming apps or two cloud-storage plans. The page flags these so you can decide which one to keep.
Is my data private?
Yes. Everything stays in your browser. The page does not make network calls. If you save an audit, it goes to localStorage on your device only.
How often should I re-run this?
Every three months works well. That is about how often new plans, price hikes, or free trials show up. The page lets you save past audits so you can track savings over time.