Subscription Audit Toolkit
Review all your subscriptions, identify waste, and build a lightweight ongoing management habit.
When to Use
- You suspect you are paying for unused subscriptions.
- You want to reduce monthly recurring expenses.
- You are doing an annual financial review.
- Family members subscribe to overlapping services.
Workflow
Phase 1: Discover All Subscriptions
- Check bank and credit card statements for the last 3 months.
- Review app store purchase histories (Apple App Store, Google Play).
- Search email for receipts, renewal notices, and free-trial conversions.
- Ask household members what they subscribe to individually.
Phase 2: Build a Complete Subscription Inventory
For each subscription, record:
- Name of service
- Monthly or annual cost
- Billing cycle and next renewal date
- Payment method used
- Primary user(s) in the household
- Estimated usage frequency (daily, weekly, monthly, rarely, never)
Phase 3: Apply the Usage-Value Assessment Matrix
Plot each subscription on a simple 2x2:
- High usage + High value: Keep.
- High usage + Low value: Evaluate — is there a cheaper alternative or a way to reduce cost?
- Low usage + High value: Evaluate — is the value emotional or practical? Can usage be increased?
- Low usage + Low value: Strong candidate for cancellation.
Phase 4: Optimize What You Keep
For subscriptions you decide to keep, consider:
- Switching to annual billing (often saves 15–20%).
- Upgrading to a family plan to cover multiple users.
- Service rotation: subscribe to one streaming service for a month, binge, cancel, rotate to another.
- Bundling opportunities through mobile or internet providers.
Phase 5: Design a Monthly Subscription Review Routine
- Set a 10-minute calendar reminder for the same day each month.
- Review the inventory for new subscriptions, changed prices, or upcoming renewals.
- Update usage estimates based on the past month.
Phase 6: Create a New Subscription Evaluation Checklist
Before signing up for any new subscription, answer:
- What specific need does this serve?
- Is there a free alternative that meets 80% of the need?
- Can I try it for 7–14 days before committing to a paid plan?
- When will I re-evaluate this decision?
- Who else in the household should be consulted?
What This Skill Does Not Cover
- Investment or financial planning: This is an organizational exercise, not financial advice.
- Budgeting for variable expenses: Focus is strictly on recurring subscriptions.
- Account security or password management: Use appropriate security tools for credential management.
Output Format
The output includes:
- Subscription Inventory (name, cost, billing cycle, payment method, usage)
- Usage-Value Assessment Matrix
- Cancellation Decision Framework
- Optimization Strategies (annual billing, family plans, rotation)
- Monthly Subscription Review Routine
- New Subscription Evaluation Checklist
Safety & Compliance
- Do not provide financial advice — frame as an organizational exercise.
- Do not instruct user to share account credentials with non-family members.
- Remind user to check cancellation policies before subscribing to annual plans.
- Do not recommend specific services or make value judgments about what's worth paying for.
- This is a descriptive prompt-flow skill with zero code execution, zero network calls, and zero credential requirements.
Acceptance Criteria
- SKILL.md includes a complete subscription discovery method.
- Usage-value assessment matrix is clearly defined.
- Optimization strategies are practical and legal.
- No executable code, API calls, or external dependencies.
- English-first.
Examples
Example 1: Basic Use
User says: "I think I'm paying for stuff I don't use."
Skill guides: Run the discovery phase across bank statements, app stores, and email. Build the inventory. Apply the usage-value matrix. Identify 2–3 clear cancellation candidates. Deliver output in the specified format.
Example 2: Detailed Session
User says: "Our family has four streaming services and we only watch one regularly."
Skill guides: Map all four services on the matrix. Propose a rotation schedule. Check for family plan upgrades. Design a monthly 10-minute review. Create a "new service" checklist to prevent future bloat.