Add your recurring subscriptions to see the real monthly, annual, and daily cost
Most people dramatically underestimate their subscription spending. Studies show the average American thinks they spend around $86 per month on subscriptions, but the real number is closer to $91 — and for many households, it is well over $200.
The problem is not any single subscription. It is the slow accumulation of $5 here and $15 there that adds up to hundreds or even thousands of dollars each year. A streaming service you signed up for during a free trial, a productivity app you used once, a gym membership you have not touched since January — they all quietly drain your account month after month.
Our free subscription cost calculator helps you see the full picture by adding up every recurring charge and showing you the real monthly, annual, and daily cost of your subscriptions.
Calculating your true subscription spending takes three steps:
Here is how subscription spending typically breaks down for US consumers:
Annual billing plans typically save you 15–20% compared to paying month-to-month. For a single $15/month service, switching to annual billing saves roughly $25–$35 per year. Multiply that across 5–10 subscriptions, and the savings add up to $150–$300 annually.
The trade-off is committing upfront. Annual plans make sense for services you are confident you will use all year — like your primary streaming service or a tool you rely on for work. For services you are still evaluating, stick with monthly until you are sure.
Once you see your total, here are practical ways to cut back without giving up the services you actually use:
The average American spends around $91 per month on subscriptions according to recent studies, though many people underestimate their actual spending by 2–3x. Common subscription categories include streaming services, music, cloud storage, food delivery, fitness, and productivity software.
The average American has around 12 active subscriptions, spanning streaming video, music, cloud storage, news, fitness, food delivery, and software services. Many people have subscriptions they have forgotten about or rarely use.
Annual plans are typically 15–20% cheaper than paying monthly. For example, a $10/month service might cost $96/year instead of $120, saving you $24. However, annual plans require a larger upfront payment and lock you in for a full year, so they are best for services you know you will keep using.
Start by listing all your subscriptions using this calculator. Cancel services you rarely use, downgrade premium tiers, take advantage of bundle deals, share family plans, and rotate streaming services instead of keeping them all active at once. Use a personal finance app to track recurring charges automatically.
Check your bank and credit card statements for the last 3 months and look for any recurring charges. Many people are surprised to find services they signed up for during a free trial and forgot to cancel. A subscription tracking tool or budgeting app can help you catch these automatically going forward.
Balance Pro makes it easy to budget and track your personal finance, so you always know where your money is going.
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