How to cut subscriptions & recurring bills
Recurring charges are designed to be forgotten. A few dollars here, a "free trial" there, an annual renewal you didn't notice — and suddenly a meaningful slice of your income leaves automatically every month. The good news: of all the ways to save, this one is the least painful, because you're cutting things you'd stopped using anyway.
Run a subscription audit
Pull your last full month — ideally three — of bank and card statements and list every recurring charge: streaming, apps, memberships, cloud storage, insurance, software, donations, that one thing you can't quite identify. Seeing them in a single list is genuinely eye-opening, because their whole business model depends on you not looking. Don't forget the annual ones; a once-a-year renewal is easy to miss but just as real.
Sort each one: use it, lose it, or trim it
Go down the list and put every item in one of three buckets:
- Use it — you genuinely value it and it earns its place. Keep it (but you may still be able to trim it; see below).
- Lose it — you forgot it existed, rarely use it, or have an overlap (three streaming services you don't watch). Cancel today.
- Trim it — you want it, but not at this price or tier. Downgrade the plan, drop add-ons, or switch to annual billing if it's cheaper.
Be honest in the "use it" bucket. "I might use it" usually means "lose it."
Do the cost-per-use math
For anything you're unsure about, work out what it costs each time you actually use it. A $15 service you use twice a month is costing about $7.50 a use; a gym membership you visit twice costs far more per visit than a drop-in would. Our percentage calculator makes the quick division easy. Cost-per-use cuts through the "but it's only $15" feeling and shows what you're really paying.
Negotiate the bills you keep
The recurring costs you can't cancel — phone, internet, insurance — can often still come down. Once a year, call and ask whether you're on the best available plan, mention competitor pricing, and ask directly if there's a loyalty or retention rate. It feels awkward, but a ten-minute call can knock a recurring amount off your bill every month for a year. Companies bank on you never asking; ask.
Build a system so it doesn't creep back
Subscriptions regrow if you let them. Two habits keep them in check: set a calendar reminder before any free trial ends so it doesn't silently convert, and do a quick subscription review every few months. You can even funnel what you cut straight into savings — redirect those canceled charges into your emergency fund or a goal, and the money you were losing quietly starts working for you instead.