A subscription tracker that turns a messy pile of recurring charges into one clear picture: what you actually pay each month, what it adds up to over a year, and which renewals are about to hit your card. It is built for anyone whose streaming, software, music, cloud-storage and gym memberships have quietly crept up — the average household now juggles a dozen or more recurring payments, and the ones you forget about are exactly the ones that keep billing.
The core problem with subscriptions is that they hide behind different billing cycles. A service billed yearly looks cheap next to one billed monthly, even when it costs far more over twelve months. This tool fixes that by normalising everything to a like-for-like monthly and yearly figure, so every line is directly comparable and your real total stops being a guess.
How it works
For each subscription you enter the name, the amount you are charged per cycle, the billing cycle (weekly, monthly, quarterly or yearly), a category and the next renewal date. Behind the scenes each subscription is annualised — weekly is multiplied by 52, monthly by 12, quarterly by 4 and yearly by 1 — and the annual figure is divided by 12 to give a fair monthly-equivalent cost. Active subscriptions are summed into a headline monthly and yearly total that updates instantly as you add, pause or remove items.
A renewal reminder panel watches the next-renewal dates and surfaces anything due inside your chosen window (3 to 30 days), sorted soonest-first, so a forgotten annual plan can’t ambush you. When you have been charged, the Renewed button rolls the date forward by one full cycle. A doughnut chart breaks your yearly spend down by category so you can see whether streaming or software is really where the money goes, and a CSV export hands the whole list to a spreadsheet. Everything is saved in your browser automatically — close the tab, come back tomorrow, and your list is still there.
Example
Suppose you track four subscriptions: Netflix at £10.99/month, Spotify at £11.99/month, iCloud+ at £2.99/month and Amazon Prime at £95/year. The three monthly plans add up to £25.97/month. Prime’s £95/year normalises to roughly £7.92/month, bringing your true monthly spend to about £33.89 — which is close to £407/year. Seeing the annual figure is often the nudge that makes you cancel the one service you never use. If Netflix renews in four days, it sits at the top of the reminder panel with the date and amount, so you can decide to keep or cancel it before the charge lands.
Every figure is calculated in your browser — no numbers are uploaded or stored.