The Best Apps to Help You Cancel Subscriptions (2026): Trim, Bobby, TrackMySubs, Hiatus

20 hours ago 1
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TrackMySubs gives you an overview of your outgoings and lets you organize your expenditure into categories too—entertainment, insurance, utilities, or whatever. It's easy to see what's going out and when, and if you want to you can have the app email you alerts whenever a payment is about to go out, which is handy.

We also like the feature for keeping track of free trials you've signed up for, so you don't suddenly get charged when you meant to cancel the service. It's not the most comprehensive tool for this job, but it is straightforward and easy to use—and free for tracking 10 subscriptions or less.

TrackMySubs for the web (Free, or $10 per month)

Hiatus

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Hiatus covers every aspect of your incomings and outgoings.

Courtesy of Haitus

Hiatus is one of the more comprehensive financial management tools out there, and once you plug it into one or more bank accounts, it'll help you work out where savings can be made—whether that's on getting a better insurance deal or restructuring the way you're paying off any debts.

Subscription monitoring is included too, so you can both see how much you're spending and make changes where necessary—and with some subscriptions, you can even have the Hiatus app request the cancellation on your behalf.

You can get alerts about when money is going out of your account, and about regular subscriptions that increase in price over time.You can also get a variety of useful, detailed reports about what you're spending money on. If you're wondering exactly where your paycheck goes each month, this will tell you.

Hiatus for the web, Android, and iOS (Free, or $10 per month)

SubZen

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SubZen takes a chilled approach to subscription management.

Photograph: David Nield

As its name suggests, SubZen wants to take the stress out of subscription management. It gives you a clean, neat interface through which you can log your daily, weekly, monthly, and yearly expenditure—not just for digital services and streaming, but for utilities, loan repayments, pet costs, savings, and more.

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