Snowball Your Debt
Reduce monthly bills

Run a Subscription Audit and Free Up Monthly Cash

Small recurring charges are easy to forget and add up fast. A subscription audit finds them, cancels the ones you do not use, and turns that money into progress on debt or savings.

By Christopher CarrollUpdated July 8, 2026Practical guide

The short answer: List every recurring charge, cancel what you do not use or value, and redirect the freed amount to your smallest debt or a starter buffer so the savings do the work.

A practical way to start

1

List every subscription

Check statements for the last two or three months to catch monthly and annual charges.

2

Rate each one

Mark whether you use it, forgot it, or could pause it without missing it.

3

Cancel or pause the extras

Remove the ones you do not use and pause any you can live without for now.

4

Redirect the freed money

Send the freed amount to a debt payment or your buffer so it does not drift into spending.

Where hidden subscriptions hide

Free trials that converted, annual renewals you forgot, app store charges, and duplicate streaming services are common culprits. Reviewing two or three months of statements, not just the current one, catches the yearly and every-other-month charges a single month would miss.

Deciding what stays

The test is simple: do you use it, and is it worth the cost this month. Some subscriptions genuinely earn their price. The goal is not to cut everything, only to stop paying for things you forgot you had or no longer value.

Turn the savings into progress

Canceling is only half the win. If the freed money stays in checking it usually gets spent. Redirecting it to your smallest debt or a starter buffer is what converts a canceled subscription into faster payoff or breathing room.

Keep the plan honest: Use real due dates and amounts. The tool can organize the information, but it does not move money, pay providers, or guarantee a result.

Frequently asked questions

How do I find all my subscriptions?

Review two or three months of bank and card statements, plus app store settings, to catch monthly, annual, and occasional charges.

How much can a subscription audit save?

It varies by household, but forgotten trials, duplicate services, and unused apps often add up to a meaningful monthly amount.

What should I do with the money I free up?

Redirect it to your smallest debt or a starter buffer so it accelerates your plan instead of drifting into spending.

Put the idea into your own numbers

Use the free Snowball Your Debt tools to turn the guide into a paycheck plan you can review and update.

Track your monthly cash flow

Educational information only. Results depend on the information entered and do not replace individualized financial, legal, credit, or tax advice.