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Indestata > Debt > 7 Subscription Services That Seniors Forget to Cancel
Debt

7 Subscription Services That Seniors Forget to Cancel

TSP Staff By TSP Staff Last updated: August 5, 2025 7 Min Read
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Image source: Unsplash

In today’s automated world, convenience has become costly, especially for older adults. Subscription-based services are everywhere, from streaming platforms to monthly product deliveries. They often begin with a trial, a promotion, or a one-time use that quietly renews each month, deducting funds whether the service is being used or not.

For many seniors, especially those less familiar with digital management tools, these small recurring charges are easy to overlook. Unlike large bills, they don’t grab attention. They slip through monthly statements and accumulate over time, sometimes draining hundreds or even thousands of dollars annually from retirement accounts.

Here are seven common subscription services that older adults often forget to cancel, along with simple strategies to take back control.

7 Subscription Services That Seniors Forget to Cancel

1. Streaming Services (That Nobody’s Watching)

Netflix, Hulu, Disney+, Amazon Prime Video, HBO Max—it’s easy to sign up, and even easier to forget. Seniors may subscribe to watch one show or to keep up with grandkids’ recommendations, only to leave the service running unused for months.

Many older adults don’t realize just how many of these subscriptions are still active. When multiple streaming services are combined, monthly charges can exceed $50–$100. Over a year, that’s more than $1,000 going toward content that may never get played again.

To prevent this, do a quarterly review of bank or credit card statements and cancel anything that hasn’t been used in a while.

2. Magazine or Newspaper Subscriptions That Went Digital

Many seniors still pay for legacy print publications out of habit, even if they’ve stopped reading them. Others are unknowingly paying for digital versions of magazines or newspapers that came bundled with another service.

The problem is that these subscriptions often auto-renew, quietly increasing in price year over year. And since many bills arrive via email or app notifications, older adults who aren’t tech-savvy may never notice.

Checking for recurring charges and calling the publisher directly to cancel can stop this slow drip of wasted funds.

3. Fitness Apps or Gym Memberships That Go Unused

It’s common to sign up for a health app, virtual fitness platform, or senior-friendly gym, especially with good intentions around New Year’s resolutions or a doctor’s recommendation.

But months later, many seniors are still being charged, even if they’ve stopped attending classes or using the app altogether. Some gym memberships require in-person cancellation or charge a fee for early termination, making it harder to break free.

If an app or membership isn’t being actively used, call to cancel, or ask a trusted family member to help navigate the online cancellation process.

4. Shopping Subscriptions Like Amazon Prime or Walmart+

Services like Amazon Prime and Walmart+ offer perks like free shipping or exclusive deals, but they also come with a hefty annual or monthly fee, often over $100 per year. Many seniors forget they’ve signed up, especially if the initial charge was part of a holiday deal or free trial. Worse, some continue to pay for both services while using only one or neither.

Ask yourself: Are you still actively shopping enough to justify the cost? If not, it might be time to let it go.

5. Meal Kit or Food Delivery Plans

Meal kits like HelloFresh, Blue Apron, or prepared meal subscriptions might have been convenient once, but if you’ve stopped using them or are cooking simpler meals, they can quickly become a money pit.

Some of these services charge for deliveries even if you forget to pause or skip a week. And others hide the cancellation process behind a series of online menus and confirmations. If you’re no longer using the service regularly, cancel entirely. Don’t rely on memory to skip upcoming deliveries.

6. Niche Apps with Recurring Premium Fees

From brain-training games to relaxation apps to senior dating platforms, many apps offer “premium” access through monthly or annual subscriptions. These often begin with a free trial that switches into auto-renewal billing.

Seniors with smartphones or tablets may have accumulated a handful of these over time, without ever realizing they’re being billed through Apple, Google Play, or another app store. To check, review your device’s subscription settings. It may surprise you how many micro-charges have quietly stacked up.

7. Identity Protection or Credit Monitoring Services

While identity protection is important, many seniors have signed up for multiple overlapping monitoring services without knowing it, often at the urging of financial institutions, insurance companies, or tech support scams.

Some of these services are legitimate but overpriced. Others offer minimal protection while charging high monthly fees. And because their value isn’t tangible, the monthly charge often goes unquestioned.

Review whether you’re actually using the alerts and whether the benefits match the cost. One reliable service may be enough—cancel the rest.

Subscription Fatigue Is Real, But It’s Also Fixable

The subscription economy thrives on forgetfulness. And for older adults who may not check digital receipts regularly or feel overwhelmed by cancellation steps, it’s easy to lose track of which services are still draining funds.

The good news? Once you identify the recurring charges, it becomes much easier to take back control. Enlist help from family, use budgeting apps to track subscriptions, or set reminders every few months to audit your accounts.

Cutting just a few of these can result in meaningful savings—money that can be used for travel, hobbies, health, or simply peace of mind.

Have you discovered any surprise monthly charges recently? Which ones were hardest to cancel?

Read More:

10 Silent Budget Killers Hiding in Your Monthly Subscriptions

5 Apps That Are Harvesting Financial Data From Seniors

Read the full article here

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