Thomas Hastings Photo Not Available
Thomas Hastings| NMLS# 2104369
Loan Officer

The Cost of Convenience: Tracking Your Forgotten Recurring Subscriptions

The Cost of Convenience: Tracking Your Forgotten Recurring Subscriptions

35% of Americans signed up for accounts with recurring payments without even realizing, according to a survey of over 1,000 adults conducted by CreditCards.com.

Take a moment to think about your subscription payments. Consider streaming platforms, exercise clubs, in-app payments, and subscription boxes. Do you know how many you’re paying for? Or how much are they costing you?

The total cost may be more than you’d expect. According to a WMG study, 84% of Americans wildly underestimate how much they’re spending on subscription services. The average person estimated they spent around $75 a month, but in reality, that number was closer to $238 a month, or over $2,800 a year.

Many companies make subscribing so easy that you may not realize what you’ve signed up for before it's too late. Sabrina Miller, our interviewee, has mastered the art of tracking down and managing those subscription costs.

Start by Reviewing Your Bank Statements

The best place to start is by checking your bank statements:

It’s really good financial hygiene to go through your credit card statements because you wouldn’t ordinarily see them (recurring expenses) if you’re only scanning your bill for high amounts,” Sabrina says.

“Whether it’s real expenses, like the $30 a month I had been paying for the past five years on the Adobe subscription that my kids got for free from school, or small increments of $3.99 that you don’t notice, it adds up to an insane amount.”

You can access your bank statements from your online bank portal, and it’s a good idea to check them at least once a month. Consider printing out your statements and going over the charges line-by-line. If you find something you want to cancel, contact the company to get the account closed.

Finding Ways to Consistently Monitor Your Recurring Expenses

If you haven’t been keeping an eye on your email for receipts, it’s important to start now. It’s not uncommon for ongoing subscription receipts to appear in your inbox, but they don’t always show up in your primary email folder.

Check your spam or trash folders, too. It’s easy for email filters to mistake recurring receipts as spam, so they could be appearing in your junk folders automatically.

“I signed up for Apple Pay. With them, once you hook your credit card up, you get an alert any time your credit card gets charged,” Sabrina says. “All of a sudden, I was constantly getting alerts for $25-30. It took me a while to realize what was happening, but when I looked at my credit card statements I was like, oh my god.”

When you come across emailed receipts or evidence of a forgotten account, use the contact information that’s typically included at the bottom of the email to cancel the subscriptions you don’t want. If applicable, you can also try going to their website directly and logging-in to your account or try canceling the subscription through the App Store.

“Some subscriptions were easier than others to cancel,” Sabrina says. “It’s worth calling them because, as a courtesy, they might reimburse you for a few months if you haven’t used the service in years.”

Tackling the App Store

Recurring app subscriptions accounted for $10.6 billion in consumer spending on the App Store in 2017, and are poised to grow to $75.7 billion by the end of 2022. Alongside this substantial growth, a number of developers are taking advantage of paid subscriptions by making it too easy to subscribe. Consumers can be tricked by intentionally confusing app designs, and promises of “free trials” that convert to paid subscriptions after only a matter of days.

“Recurring expenses are often unintended,” Sabrina says. “My kids would sign up for a free trial to learn how to do something and then never think about it ever again. Years later, I was still getting charged $25/month for the service.”

If you do opt for a free trial, make a calendar event to help remind you to cancel it. “Very often, you can cancel as soon as you sign-up, and you’ll still have access for that free trial period,” Sabrina says.

How to Keep Track of In-App Purchases

If you want to keep track of your ongoing app subscriptions, the easiest way to check is through the app store. While it’s easy to download an app with a free trial followed by a monthly subscription fee and forget that you’re paying for it, it’s not as easy to unsubscribe.

“If something is purchased through the App Store, you are able to see everyone in your family’s subscriptions through just your account,” Sabrina says.

It’s important to remember that uninstalling an app will not cancel your subscription. You have to cancel the subscription itself to get the charges to stop.

Closing Thoughts

When it comes to building a sustainable budget, it’s important to trim the fat. Decide which subscription services are useful, which ones are unnecessary, and most importantly, find the ones that you don’t realize that you’re paying for. Keeping up with your bank statements, email folders, and subscriptions within the App Store will keep your wallet (and your sanity) under control.