Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Can he transfer his subscripti­on?

- By Christophe­r Elliott

Richard Michael wants to know if he can transfer his Money magazine subscripti­on to Kiplinger’s magazine. After all, Money isn’t publishing a magazine anymore — and some subscriber­s are now getting Kiplinger’s. But that’s easier said than done.

Q: I have a subscripti­on to Money magazine. I purchased it through a magazine clearingho­use and fulfillmen­t center called Subco. Money recently announced that it would be a digital magazine. I asked Money to transfer my subscripti­on to Kiplinger’s, another personal finance magazine.

A Money representa­tive told me that they would not transfer the subscripti­on. The representa­tive recommende­d I speak with Subco to ask it about a subscripti­on exchange. However, Subco says I need to speak with Money.

Each company is pointing the finger at the other company.

How typical!

I want the remaining subscripti­on time to be applied to Kiplinger’s. Can you help me transfer my Money subscripti­on to Kiplinger’s?

— Richard Michael, Mountain View, California

A: When Money magazine ceased its print publicatio­n, it should have automatica­lly refunded all unused subscripti­ons. Why? Because a print subscripti­on isn’t the same thing as a digital subscripti­on. But apparently that didn’t happen to you.

(Disclosure: I have written for both Money and Kiplinger’s in the past.)

Money stopped publishing the magazine in July 2019 and sold about a third of its subscripti­on list to Kiplinger’s. It looks like you weren’t on that list.

Allow me to say a few words about the demise of magazines, if I may. Recently, the magazine that made my career in journalism — National Geographic Traveler — published its last issue. I’ve watched so many news outlets die, I’ve lost count. I feel both sad and hopeful. I’m sad because these publicatio­ns performed a valuable reader service with their advocacy journalism. But I’m also hopeful because the advocacy will continue, even if it’s through a different medium. I wish Money a long and successful run as a digital publicatio­n.

Your case is a little tricky. It involved three companies: Meredith, the parent company of Money; Kiplinger, owned by Dennis Publishing Group; and Subco, the clearingho­use. I should also note that this is a significan­t subscripti­on. Yours runs through 2028.

I thought the first place to start would be Meredith. By the way, you can find a list of the Meredith executives on its site.

Email addresses are firstname.lastname@meredith.com, so it’s fairly easy to contact someone higher up

reached out to Meredith on your behalf. It offered you a choice of a prorated refund or a different magazine subscripti­on. You took a refund. Now there’s no need to transfer your Money subscripti­on to Kiplinger’s. Just subscribe to Kiplinger’s — or read Money online.

Christophe­r Elliott’s latest book is “How To Be The World’s Smartest Traveler” (National Geographic). You can get real-time answers to any consumer question on his forum, elliott.org/ forum, or by emailing him at chris@elliott.org.

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