Interactive calculator

Annual vs Monthly
When Should You Commit?

Enter any subscription's monthly and annual prices below. We'll show you the exact break-even point, total savings, and whether the annual plan is actually worth it for you.

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Popular Services: Annual vs Monthly Breakdown

Here's how the math works out for the most common subscriptions. The annual discount varies, and some are better deals than others.

When Annual Plans Make Sense

Annual billing is not always a good deal. It depends on your relationship with the service.

You've Used It 6+ Months

If you've been paying monthly for at least six months without pausing, it's a strong signal you'll use it for the full year. That's when the annual discount genuinely saves you money.

It's Part of Your Daily Routine

Spotify for your commute, Microsoft 365 for work, a cloud storage service for your files. If you use it almost every day, it's not going anywhere. Lock in the annual rate.

The Discount Is 15% or More

A 5% discount on an annual plan barely justifies the lost flexibility. But at 15-20% off, you're essentially getting 2-3 months free. That's a meaningful savings worth the commitment.

You Can Afford the Upfront Cost

Annual plans require paying 10-12 months upfront. If that creates a cash flow issue, the monthly flexibility is worth more than the discount. Never stretch your budget for a deal.

When Monthly Billing Is Smarter

Sometimes the flexibility of monthly billing is worth more than any discount. Here's when to stay monthly.

You Just Started Using the Service

New to a streaming service, productivity tool, or app? Stay monthly for at least 3-6 months. Many people sign up excited about a new service, then stop using it within two months. Monthly billing lets you walk away without losing money.

You Might Cancel Soon

If there's even a chance you'll cancel in the next few months, stay monthly. The break-even point for most annual plans is 8-10 months. Cancelling before that means you overpaid. Trust your gut if you're on the fence.

Price Drops Are Expected

Competitive markets (streaming, AI tools) often see price cuts or new competitor launches. Locking into an annual plan means you can't take advantage of a better deal or a new entrant offering a free trial. Monthly billing keeps your options open.

It's a Seasonal Subscription

Some subscriptions are used seasonally: a fitness app you use in January, a sports streaming service during the season, or a VPN for summer travel. Monthly billing lets you subscribe only when you need it, which beats an annual plan every time.

The Hidden Cost of Annual Plans

The sticker price tells one story, but there are costs the annual discount doesn't account for.

Opportunity Cost

That $120 annual payment could sit in a high-yield savings account earning interest. For expensive subscriptions like Adobe Creative Cloud at $599/year, the opportunity cost of tying up that money upfront is meaningful. You're lending the company an interest-free loan for 12 months.

Cancellation Rigidity

Most annual subscriptions don't offer prorated refunds. If you cancel in month 7, you've already paid for months 8-12 that you won't use. The "savings" evaporate if your needs change. Life is unpredictable; your subscriptions should be flexible enough to match.

The "Forgot to Cancel" Tax

Annual renewals are easy to forget. A $120 charge once a year is less noticeable than $10/month but hits harder when it surprises you. Many people pay for annual subscriptions they've stopped using simply because they forgot the renewal date.

Price Increase Lock-Out

Some services raise prices between annual billing cycles. While your current year is locked, you might auto-renew at a higher rate. Monthly subscribers see price changes immediately and can make informed decisions. Annual subscribers often discover increases only when the large renewal charge appears.

Track All Your Plans with Subcut

Subcut keeps track of every subscription in one place. See whether you're on monthly or annual billing, get renewal reminders, and never be surprised by a charge again.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is an annual subscription always cheaper than monthly?

Almost always on a per-month basis, yes. Most services discount annual plans by 15-20%. However, cheaper per month doesn't always mean better value. If you cancel before the break-even point (typically 8-10 months in), you would have spent less on the monthly plan. Annual only saves money if you use the service for the full year.

What is the break-even point for annual vs monthly?

The break-even point is the month when your cumulative monthly payments exceed the annual price. For a typical 16-17% discount, this falls around month 10. Before that point, monthly billing would have been cheaper if you cancelled. Use the calculator above to find the exact break-even for any subscription.

Can I get a refund if I cancel an annual plan early?

It depends on the platform and service. Apple App Store subscriptions generally don't provide prorated refunds for early cancellation. Some services like Adobe charge an early termination fee. Google Play may offer partial refunds in certain cases. Always check the specific cancellation policy before committing to annual billing.

How much can I save by switching to annual plans?

Typical savings range from 15-20% per subscription, which works out to 2-3 free months per year. For a $10/month service, annual billing saves roughly $20-24/year. Across all your stable subscriptions, total savings can reach $100-300+ per year depending on how many services you use.

Should I switch all my subscriptions to annual?

No. Only switch subscriptions you've been using consistently for at least six months and plan to keep. Stay monthly for new services, anything you might cancel, seasonal subscriptions, or services in rapidly changing markets where better alternatives may appear. Flexibility has real value.

How do I remember when annual subscriptions renew?

Use Subcut to track all your subscriptions and renewal dates in one place. Annual renewals only happen once a year, making them easy to forget. Subcut sends reminders before each renewal so you can decide whether to continue, switch plans, or cancel before being charged again.

Make Every Subscription Decision Count

Whether you're going annual or staying monthly, Subcut helps you track every plan, set renewal reminders, and take control of your subscription spending.

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Free to start. No bank connection needed.