Budgeting UK 2026 — Systems, Methods and Practical Money Management

How to Stop Wasting Money on Unused Subscriptions UK 2026

UK households pay for an average of £47/month in subscriptions they barely use. Here's how to audit, cancel, and manage recurring payments effectively.

Research consistently finds UK households pay for subscriptions they do not use or barely notice. The average UK adult has 7–9 active subscriptions. Here is how to audit and cut them.

Common Subscription Categories in UK Households

Category Common services Typical monthly cost
Streaming video Netflix, Disney+, Amazon Prime Video, Sky/Now TV, Apple TV+ £5–£20 each
Music streaming Spotify, Apple Music, Tidal, YouTube Premium £5–£12 each
News and media The Times, The Guardian, The Telegraph digital £5–£30 each
Gaming Xbox Game Pass, PlayStation Plus, Nintendo Switch Online £7–£15 each
Food delivery Deliveroo Plus, Just Eat subscription, Amazon Fresh £3–£10 each
Fitness Gym membership, Peloton, fitness apps £10–£80 each
Software Microsoft 365, Adobe, Dropbox, iCloud storage £2–£20 each
Shopping Amazon Prime, ASOS Premier, Ocado Smart Pass £5–£10 each
Magazines Various digital or print subscriptions £5–£20 each
Financial Investment apps, credit monitoring, VPNs £3–£15 each

The Audit Process

Step 1 — List every subscription Go through bank and credit card statements for the past 3 months. Note: service name, monthly cost, last used.

Step 2 — Categorise by usage

  • Used weekly or more: keep
  • Used monthly: consider keeping
  • Used rarely or not at all: cancel

Step 3 — Cancel the obvious ones Cancel anything you haven’t used in 3+ months without hesitation. You can always re-subscribe.

Step 4 — Negotiate on the ones you want to keep Call your streaming services, gym, or insurance and ask about better rates. Companies regularly offer existing customers discounts to prevent cancellation.

Step 5 — Set a subscription review reminder Put a quarterly calendar reminder to repeat the audit.

How to Cancel — Platform by Platform

Platform How to cancel
Netflix Account → Membership → Cancel
Spotify Account → Subscription → Cancel
Amazon Prime Account → Prime Membership → End Membership
Apple subscriptions Settings → [Your name] → Subscriptions
Google Play Play Store → Profile → Payments & subscriptions
Gym Usually requires written notice (check terms); many require 1 month notice
Insurance Call to cancel; must not charge more to cancel than to continue

Using Bank/Card Controls

Most UK banks allow you to see and cancel subscriptions through their app:

  • Monzo: Payments → Subscriptions
  • Starling: Card → Card Spending Controls
  • Barclays: App → Payments → Manage subscriptions

For persistent or uncooperative merchants, tell your bank to cancel the continuous payment authority. They must comply within a few days.

Realistic Saving Estimate

Household scenario Monthly saving from audit
2 streaming services not used £15–£30
Gym not visited in 3 months £20–£60
Duplicate music streaming services £8–£12
Food delivery subscription not earning back £5–£10
Old magazine or newspaper subscription £8–£25
Total typical savings £56–£137/month

For reducing your total household bills (beyond subscriptions), see How to Reduce Your Household Bills UK.

Alternatives to Cancelling — Pause and Downgrade

Before cancelling a subscription you use occasionally, check for these options:

  • Pause — Netflix, Spotify, and others allow you to pause billing for 1–3 months and resume later. Useful if your use is seasonal.
  • Downgrade — Some streaming services offer cheaper ad-supported tiers (Netflix, Paramount+, Disney+). You keep access at half the price.
  • Family or shared plans — Many subscriptions (Spotify Family, Apple One, YouTube Premium Family) allow multiple users at a lower per-person cost. Share with a partner, parent, or trusted friend where the service allows.
  • Student pricing — Spotify, Amazon Prime, and others offer heavily discounted student rates if you have a valid UK university email. Worth checking if you qualify.

These options avoid full cancellation when you want to keep a service but reduce the cost.

Your Consumer Rights

The FCA requires that since 2023 subscription services must:

  • Send a reminder before a free trial ends automatically
  • Make cancellation no harder than sign-up
  • Send a clear summary of the subscription at the start of any ongoing contract

If a company refuses to cancel, makes cancellation deliberately difficult, or continues charging after cancellation, you have grounds to raise a dispute with your bank and report to the FCA. Contact your bank and request cancellation of the continuous payment authority (CPA) — banks are legally required to act on this.

See also How to Reduce Your Household Bills UK for the full bill-reduction approach.

Sources

  1. FCA — Subscription traps guidance
  2. Citizens Advice — Cancelling a subscription