Subscription Audit Calculator
Add up every recurring subscription, see the true monthly and yearly cost, and find out how much you'd save by cancelling the ones you don't use.
Calculator
Cancelling adds up
$119.88Dropping 1 subscription(s) saves $9.99 a month — $119.88 a year. That's money back toward goals you actually care about.
Costs are normalized to a monthly figure (weekly ×52÷12, quarterly ÷3, yearly ÷12) and totalled. Names stay on your device and aren't saved in the link.
About this calculator
Subscriptions are easy to start and easy to forget. This audit adds up every recurring charge — streaming, music, software, gym, cloud storage, news — into one honest monthly and yearly total, then shows exactly how much you would reclaim by cancelling the ones you no longer use. List each one, mark whether you are keeping or cancelling it, and the saving updates instantly.
How to read your results
Add a row for each subscription with its price and billing frequency, and toggle "Keeping" or "Cancelling". The headline shows your potential yearly saving when anything is marked to cancel, or your total yearly spend otherwise. The stats break out the all-in monthly and yearly cost and what you would still pay for the subscriptions you keep. Because everything is normalized to a monthly figure, a £120-a-year plan and a £10-a-month plan are compared on equal footing.
Worked example
Three subscriptions: streaming at $15.99/month (keep), music at $11.99/month (keep), and a cloud plan at $9.99/month (cancel).
The all-in cost is about $38 a month, or $455 a year. Keeping the first two costs roughly $336 a year, and cancelling the cloud plan saves about $120 a year — a clear, specific number to act on.
Frequently asked questions
How does it compare yearly and monthly plans fairly?
It converts everything to a monthly amount first. A yearly plan is divided by 12, a quarterly plan by 3, and a weekly plan is multiplied by 52 and divided by 12. That way a service billed annually and one billed monthly sit side by side on the same basis, and the yearly total (monthly × 12) lands an annual plan back at its real price.
Are my subscription names stored or sent anywhere?
No. Names exist only in your browser during the session. Nothing is uploaded, and if you copy the share link it records each subscription's price, billing frequency, and keep/cancel state — enough to reproduce your totals — but not the names. The audit works entirely on your device.
How often should I run a subscription audit?
A quick review every few months tends to catch the most waste, since free trials convert and prices creep up over time. Many people find at least one charge they had forgotten about. Marking the unused ones to cancel here turns a vague feeling of "too many subscriptions" into a specific yearly number.
Does it handle free trials and upcoming price rises?
It uses the price you enter, so if a trial is ending or a plan is about to get more expensive, enter the amount you will actually be charged rather than the promotional rate. The calculator reflects the numbers you give it; keeping them current keeps the totals honest.
How it's calculated
Each subscription is normalized to a monthly cost from its billing frequency: weekly × 52 ÷ 12, monthly × 1, quarterly ÷ 3, and yearly ÷ 12. The yearly figure is that monthly cost × 12, so an annual plan resolves back to its true annual price. Three totals are produced: every subscription, only those marked keep, and only those marked cancel. The cancel total is your potential saving, shown per month and per year. Subscription names are kept only in your browser for the session and are never stored or included in a shared link — the link records each item's amount, frequency, and keep/cancel choice so the totals reproduce exactly.
Spot a translation issue, a calculation issue, or have a suggestion? Let us know.