Add up all your subscriptions so you can see the real monthly, yearly, and long-term cost.
Who this is for
Anyone trying to see how small monthly subscriptions turn into real yearly spending.
What to type in
Each subscription name, price, and billing interval.
Start with the assumptions, then use the interpretation below to compare tradeoffs without bouncing between sections.
List the subscriptions you pay for so you can see the real monthly and yearly total.
| name | billingAmount | billingInterval | Actions |
|---|
Recurring spend
That turns into $0.00 per year and $0.00 over five years if nothing changes.
Add each subscription so you can see which one is doing the most damage.
Annual plans feel small in the moment, but this view converts everything into the same monthly language.
The top one or two services usually matter more than the long tail.
Review the top three items first. Downgrade, cancel, or combine those before worrying about the smaller ones.
Use the five-year total to decide whether a service is still worth keeping.
Results
Relative comparison of your main outputs
Monthly total
$0.00
Annual total
$0.00
5-year total
$0.00
Monthly total
$0.00
Annual total
$0.00
5-year total
$0.00
Clarity helps connect recurring-cost assumptions back to actual bank and card transactions so you can spot the subscriptions that quietly accumulate.
Use this if you want to understand how the calculator works, not just plug in numbers.
Step 1
Add each subscription with its billing amount and interval.
Step 2
Review the monthly-equivalent totals and ranked breakdown.
Step 3
Identify the top recurring costs to optimize or cancel.
These cover the assumptions, tradeoffs, and edge cases behind the calculator.
Use the calculator for the math, then use these guides to make the decision with more confidence.
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