Paid template
Subscriptions are designed to be easy to start and easy to forget, and the business model depends on the second part. The unused streaming service, the trial that quietly converted, the app you meant to cancel — each is small enough to ignore and, together, larger than most people would guess.
Subscription Tracker brings all of them into one view: what you pay for, how much, and when it renews. The first step toward spending on what you actually use.
The problem it addresses
The trouble with subscriptions is structural. They are small, automatic, and scattered across cards and accounts, so no single charge is large enough to notice while the total quietly compounds. Most people genuinely cannot list everything they are subscribed to; the whole model is built to keep each payment beneath attention.
Then there is the renewal trap: the annual plan that recharges on a date you have forgotten, the free trial that becomes a paid one in silence. These are features working as intended, and visibility is the most reliable defense.
What’s inside
- A central subscription tracker that gathers every recurring service in one place, so the full list finally exists somewhere you can see it.
- Room to record what matters: cost, billing cycle, and renewal date, so the total is a known figure rather than a guess.
- A clear view of renewals, so trials and annual charges stop arriving as surprises.
- A simple structure for periodically reviewing whether each subscription still earns its place.
The template frames it well — the aim is for every subscription to be working for you, not against you.
Who it’s for
Anyone whose subscriptions have quietly multiplied: people across streaming, software, apps, and memberships who have lost the full count, anyone who suspects they are paying for things they no longer use, anyone tired of being surprised by a renewal. It suits people who want control and clarity without elaborate budgeting.
It does not cancel subscriptions for you or link to your bank. It gives you the clear picture — the decisions about what to keep stay yours.
A closing thought
There is a particular satisfaction in seeing every subscription laid out at once: the total may not be comforting, but it is finally honest. Almost everyone who does this finds at least one charge they had forgotten and would not choose again, and cancelling it feels less like saving money than like reclaiming a small piece of agency the autopay model had quietly taken. Spending deliberately on what you genuinely value, rather than drifting on defaults, is the real aim. This tracker is built to make that clarity easy, and to keep it.