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I am drowning in subscriptions, but I finally found an iPhone app to fix the chaos

It's hard to avoid subscriptions in the modern age, but it's easy to track them and make some necessary cuts.

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Subpli app running on an iPhone.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

We live in the era of subscriptions. It’s not ideal, and the fatigue of recurring app payments is ruining the smartphone experience for many. Even web browsers have firmly entered the subscription era, thanks in no small part to AI. But the duty of managing multiple subscriptions is a hassle in itself, aside from the obvious financial hit.

And if you’re like me, who manages all kinds of academic and creative subscriptions for siblings, it becomes a massive headache. On top of it all, those random emails about recurring auto-payments, which land out of the blue in the notifications shade, often deal an unsavory surprise.

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Now, there’s no dearth of subscription management tools out there. But most of them will burden you with an in-app purchase of their own. The rare few that are free will test your patience with poor UI or missing features. My long search for the perfect subscription manager landed me at Subpli, and I think I’ve finally found my digital nirvana here. 

How Subpli stands out from the rest

First, it’s free. Second, this freeware doesn’t burden you with ads. There are no in-app purchases or paywalled features. In fact, you can fully use the app without ever signing up for an account, thanks to the guest mode approach. 

There’s an option, however, to log in directly with your Google or Apple account if you are running the app on Android devices, as well. Depending on the account you pick, all the subscription details will be shared and synced. I love the guest mode for yet another reason.

It’s an unsaid commitment to user privacy and provides a fully functional tool right out of the box, something most financial apps often lack. You are not logging any credit card or banking details in the app. Subpli doesn’t have an option to save such details in the first place. 

Now, the app has an extremely clean and well-designed user interface. The homepage is divided across four hubs, and adding new subscriptions is as easy as logging your fitness or food tracking data in health apps. 

Subpli offers a long list of subscription templates that you can scroll through a vertical feed, or search for a specific one using the universal search bar at the top. In case you don’t see the desired option in the list, you can use the manual add option. 

When you add a subscription, you get the flexibility to set the local currency, pick an appropriate one, set a custom icon, specify the payment frequency, and even add a note to it. More importantly, you can set the alert behavior ahead of the next payment cycle. You can choose the specific hour and the appropriate window for getting the subscription heads-up, which could be a day or a whole week. 

This approach lets you prepare for the next payment, and doesn’t burden you with a last-minute decision with a random alert popping up at an unexpected hour. You are fully in control of the subscription reminders. It’s like a safety net, providing a window of opportunity to cancel a service I no longer need, instead of realizing I’ve been billed for an unwanted year just seconds too late.

Visibility, above anything  

The biggest strength of Subpli is the sheer ease of tracking and control over subscriptions. Instead of taking a layered approach where granular information is buried behind taps and clicks,  you get a hybrid approach in Subpli. Let’s start with the dashboard. 

It’s the default landing page in the app, and it gives you a clear view of the ongoing yearly subscription amount right at the top. With a single tap in this card, you can switch between annual to monthly spend in order to get a better idea of the short-term recurring expenditure. 

Next to it is the exact number of active subscriptions. This is followed by a carousel of these ongoing services, where you can click on any of the entries and land directly on a page where you can edit, cancel, or delete the subscription for that particular app or service 

The dashboard also offers a straightforward look at the upcoming subscriptions, which makes it easier to get an overview of what’s coming and take appropriate action. This strategy actually works, especially when you look at the numbers and decide to adjust the subscription load.

It’s almost like applying the principle highlighted in Harvard Business School’s fantastic paper, “Lifting the Veil: The Benefits of Cost Transparency.” But instead of a company making a price disclosure to customers in order to build trust, it’s an app that’s giving you easy (and total) visibility that nudges you into making the right financial decisions about your subscription expenses. 

Subpli also has a Stats page where you get a graphical overview of the subscriptions, alongside a category-wide breakdown. The latter is yet another clever psychological tactic that can encourage you to take action by showing you the proverbial mirror.

Are you spending the lion’s share of the subscription fee on entertainment services? Why do productivity tools only account for 10% of what you spend each month on digital services? These are the kind of questions that pop up in your mind when you see a clear breakdown of the charges you pay on a monthly or annual basis. 

This approach helped me cancel at least two active subscriptions, after a few minutes’ worth of pondering. Subpli marked the first time that I was looking at my digital spending in one place, and to put it bluntly, I didn’t like the amount I was spending each month, or the projected value for a full calendar year. 

I also quite like the Activity Ring-inspired look on the stats page. Next to it is the Settings page, where you can control the on-device notification styles and see a breakdown of temporarily paused as well as permanently canceled subscriptions. 

Overall, if you struggle with the invisible subscription burden — like me — and want a no-frills solution, Subpli is the best option I can recommend. And the fact that it’s entirely free, devoid of ads, and doesn’t burden you with any sign-ups, makes it an even better package, especially when seen from a privacy lens. 

Nadeem Sarwar
Nadeem is the Managing Editor at Digital Trends.
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