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I wasted megabucks on tech subscriptions – here’s how to avoid my mistakes

Tech has always been an expensive hobby, but that’s particularly the case today. The main reason is because companies have fully weaponized the power of subscriptions for software and services. These stealthy recurring payments can quickly make your bank account feel like a colander, and it was only when I recently did an end-of-year audit that I realized quite how much money was going down the plughole.

After totting up my monthly and annual subscriptions for streaming services, apps, desktop software and cloud storage, I nearly fell off my subscription chair. I was spending about £222 a month (around $270) on tech-related stuff. When I multiplied this by twelve for the annual outlay my calculator simply displayed a grimace emoji. The total was about the same as the average annual cost of owning three cats.

It wasn’t really Netflix or Spotify that were to blame. It was the stealthy bloodsuckers, the ones with recurring annual payments or services that preferred to keep quiet, rather than emailing, when a renewal was coming. Okay, there were also a few free trials that I’m sure I set reminders for, but then probably got distracted by a special offer for The Cheese Geek (yes, it’s a cheese subscription service).

An iPhone showing a Readly payment in a subscription management app

(Image credit: Future)

There’s clearly nothing wrong with paying a subscription for something you use regularly. I still happily pay for comparative bargains like Readly (above) and Google Drive, and get value from Adobe’s Photography bundle (even if I am considering non-subscription alternatives like Capture One). But I was only really using about half of my subscriptions, and I’m certainly not the only one.