Chicago Sun-Times

Millennial Money: How to stem ‘subscripti­on creep’

- BY GREGORY KAR Nerd Wallet

From Netflix, Spotify and Amazon Prime to Blue Apron, Birchbox and beer of the month, your debit or credit card statements are likely littered with subscripti­ons that are costing you dearly. Not that all subscripti­ons are bad. You might be happy to pay a monthly fee to work out at the gym or type in Microsoft Office 365. But maybe the benefits of subscribin­g to credit monitoring or razors by mail were, uh, more fleeting.

Recurring charges can be insidious, some eating away at your wealth when you don’t value the subscripti­on anymore. Three $30-per-month subscripti­ons don’t sound like much until you realize they total nearly $1,100 per year.

Inertia leads to a dozen free trials morphing into mainstays on your Mastercard. (Maybe not much longer, though. Mastercard has said it will require merchants to get your approval to proceed with charges after a free trial ends, although it applies only to physical-product subscripti­ons, like home-delivered sampler boxes .)

“The situation with subscripti­ons could end up being death by a thousand cuts when it comes to your budget,” says Bruce McClary, spokesman for the National Foundation for Credit Counseling.

Adding to the problem are so-called gray charges, deceptive and unwanted credit and debit card charges that stem from misleading sales and billing practices. They total more than $14 billion a year among U.S. cardholder­s, or $215 each, per a 2013 study by industry research firm Aite Group.

Here’s how to spring-clean recurring charges so you can spend on things that matter to you more:

Subscripti­on Audit

Job No. 1 is to identify recurring charges. Scan payment statements, including credit cards, debit cards or online accounts, like PayPal. Go back 12 months to catch annual subscripti­ons. Don’t ignore the analog world: lawn mowing, home security monitoring, pest-control service and membership­s in social and profession­al organizati­ons. Some credit card issuers, like Citi, identify recurring charges in your online account.

Multiply by 12

To feel the full impact, multiply monthly charges by 12 to get an annualized idea of what you’re spending. If you see yourself keeping the subscripti­on five years, do that math too. Then, a seemingly insignific­ant $30-per-month expense becomes $1,800.

Reassess Value

Do you use and value the subscripti­on? A gym membership is perhaps the best example of a noble subscripti­on gone wrong — when you quit going but continue paying.

Ask yourself if a subscripti­on saves you money or time. Has it lived up to its promise? Does a delivered subscripti­on box bring you joy or guilt?

Is It Redundant?

If you have cable or satellite TV, plus Netflix, YouTube TV and Amazon Prime Video, you have overlap. “There are so many redundanci­es across those platforms that you’re more or less paying for the same service over and over again,” says Bruce McClary, spokesman for the National Foundation for Credit Counseling. The same assessment goes for streaming music services, cloud storage and phone services. Are you hanging on to a landline for no reason?

Opt to Share

Can you legitimate­ly share a subscripti­on? YouTube TV allows family groups to share subscripti­ons, and certain New York Times subscripti­ons come with a bonus subscripti­on to share. Some families choose to group their wireless phones on a single plan to lower costs.

 ?? ELISE AMENDOLA/AP FILE ?? Recurring charges can be insidious, some eating away at your wealth when you don’t value the subscripti­on anymore.
ELISE AMENDOLA/AP FILE Recurring charges can be insidious, some eating away at your wealth when you don’t value the subscripti­on anymore.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States