How to Audit Your Subscriptions and Save
$100+ a Month Automatically
Be honest.
Do you actually know how many subscriptions you’re paying for right now?
Netflix.
Stan.
Disney+.
Spotify.
Apple storage.
Canva.
Gym.
Meal apps.
Cloud storage.
Kids apps.
Random free trial you forgot to cancel in 2024.
If your eye just twitched… this article is for you.
In Australia, digital subscriptions have exploded over the past five years. Research from Finder shows the average Aussie household spends hundreds per month on subscription services — often without realising how many are active.
And here’s the wild part:
Most people could cut $100+ per month without feeling deprived.
Let’s audit yours properly.
Step 1: Get the Brutal Truth (Yes, It’s Confronting)
Open your banking app.
Scroll back 2–3 months.
Search for:
• “Subscription”
• “Apple”
• “Google”
• “Direct debit”
• “Membership”
Or filter by recurring payments.
You’re looking for small amounts:
$7.99
$12.99
$19.99
$24.99
These are the silent killers.
Psychologists call this “payment invisibility.” Small recurring charges hurt less than one big bill — so we ignore them.
But $19.99 x 6 subscriptions = $120 per month.
That’s $1,440 per year.
That’s rego.
That’s Christmas.
That’s a mini holiday.
Step 2: Categorise Them
Create three columns:
1. Essential
(Actually used and genuinely valuable)
2. Nice to Have
(Used occasionally)
3. Why Do I Even Have This?
(Free trial survivor)
Be ruthless. This is an audit, not a vibe check.
Step 3: The $100 Test
Ask one question:
“If I had to manually transfer this money every month, would I?”
If the answer is no — cancel it.
The friction test never lies.
Jeff Bezos once talked about reducing friction in purchasing. Companies design subscriptions to be frictionless to start — and slightly annoying to cancel.
Don’t let convenience cost you thousands.
Step 4: Streaming Reality Check (Aussie Edition)
Do you really need:
• Netflix
• Stan
• Binge
• Disney+
• Amazon Prime
• Kayo
At the same time?
Rotate them.
Pick one or two per month.
Cancel the rest.
Streaming services in Australia don’t penalise you for pausing. You can restart anytime.
That alone can save $40–$80 per month.
Step 5: Check App Store & Google Play Subscriptions
This is where hidden money lives.
On iPhone:
Settings → Apple ID → Subscriptions
On Android:
Google Play → Payments & Subscriptions
You will likely find:
• Old fitness apps
• Editing apps
• Kids game upgrades
• Storage you forgot about
These often auto-renew quietly.
Step 6: Renegotiate Instead of Cancel (Power Move)
Before cancelling:
• Check for annual discounts
• Look for student/family plans
• Downgrade tiers
Many services offer lower plans you don’t realise exist.
Mark Bouris often talks about reviewing financial products annually — subscriptions are no different.
You wouldn’t ignore your mortgage rate.
Stop ignoring your streaming rate.
Step 7: Gym Membership Reality Check
Be honest:
Are you going consistently?
If not:
• Pause it
• Downgrade it
• Switch to casual
• Use community fitness options
A $25/week gym membership is $1,300 per year.
That’s not small.
Step 8: Automate the Savings Instead
Here’s the key.
When you cancel a subscription, immediately set up an automatic transfer for the same amount into savings.
Cancel $80 worth?
Auto-transfer $80.
Now you’ve saved $960 per year — automatically.
This is how wealthy people build buffers quietly.
Warren Buffett doesn’t build wealth by ignoring small numbers. Neither should we.
Step 9: Do This Every 6 Months
Subscriptions creep back in.
Set a calendar reminder:
“Subscription Audit”
Twice per year.
It takes 20 minutes.
It can save $1,000+ annually.
The Big Truth
Subscriptions aren’t evil.
But unconscious spending is.
When interest rates are high and cost of living is tight, controlling recurring expenses gives you immediate breathing room.
You don’t need to:
• Earn $20k more
• Start a side hustle
• Cancel everything fun
You just need awareness.
Because here’s the viral truth:
It’s not the $500 purchases ruining your budget.
It’s the 17 x $14.99s you forgot about.
Final Thought
Financial freedom isn’t always dramatic.
Sometimes it looks like:
• Cancelling three apps
• Rotating streaming
• Downgrading storage
• And building a buffer instead
Small decisions.
Big difference.