Every subscription, its real monthly cost, its next renewal, and every price hike it has pulled on you. No bank login, no account, and the list stays on your device.
Nobody decides to spend $200 a month on subscriptions. It accrues: a streaming service here, a fitness app there, three cloud storage plans nobody remembers signing up for, and a free trial from March that has been billing quietly ever since. The apps that promise to find them all do it by connecting to your bank account, which trades one problem for a bigger one.
This tracker takes the other deal: you spend ten seconds adding each service by hand, and everything you actually want stays on your device. The total at the top of the page, converted honestly across billing cycles, does the confronting for you.
Subscription-finding apps work by reading months of your transactions through an aggregator, which means a company you just met holds your bank credentials and your complete spending history. For the ten seconds per service that manual entry costs, this tracker never asks for any of that: what you subscribe to is a surprisingly complete portrait of your life, and it stays in your browser.
Add each service by hand, which takes about ten seconds per subscription with the quick-pick chips. The tracker then does the ongoing work: normalized monthly and yearly totals, renewals rolled forward automatically, due-soon warnings, and a price history per service. Apps that find subscriptions automatically do it by reading your bank account; this one never asks.
The tracker converts every billing cycle to a monthly equivalent (a $120 yearly plan counts as $10 a month, a $3 weekly app as $13 a month) and totals them. Most people discover the real number is 30 to 50 percent higher than their guess, which is exactly why the total sits at the top of the page.
Mark any subscription as a trial and its end date is flagged in the renewal list with a warning badge, sorted with your other upcoming charges. Check the tracker weekly (or after enabling Premium cloud sync, from any device) and the seven-day due-soon view catches trials before they convert to paid.
Yes, and this is the feature the bank-linked apps skip: every time you update a price, the old and new amounts are logged with the date. Each service shows its rise over time, which is useful ammunition when deciding what to cancel and when support asks why you are leaving.
Completely. What you subscribe to is a surprisingly revealing dataset, and here it stays in your browser's local storage on your device. Nothing is uploaded and there is no account. Optional Premium cloud backup can sync the list across your devices, but it is off until you explicitly turn it on.