SubChecks Feature
SubChecks breaks down your spending by category, project, and month. Spot your biggest costs, see upcoming annual charges, and understand your real monthly spend.
Mixing monthly and annual subscriptions makes it hard to know what you actually spend each month. SubChecks converts everything to a monthly equivalent automatically so you see one honest number: what you pay on average per month, across every subscription you track.
See your spend split by category: Entertainment, Productivity, Development, Design, and more. Pro users can also group subscriptions into custom projects and see a cost breakdown per project. Useful for separating work tools from personal ones, or tracking what a client engagement is costing you in software.
Annual subscriptions are easy to forget until they hit. SubChecks surfaces upcoming large charges so you are not surprised when a $99 annual renewal lands. You will see what is coming over the next 30 and 90 days before it happens.
Track how your subscription spend has changed over time. The monthly trend chart shows whether your total is growing, stable, or shrinking. Useful for catching subscription creep before it becomes a problem.
Is analytics a Pro feature?
Advanced analytics including category breakdowns, project analytics, monthly trends, and upcoming lump sums are Pro features. The main dashboard with total monthly spend and upcoming renewals is available to all users.
How does SubChecks calculate monthly spend?
Monthly subscriptions count as-is. Annual subscriptions are divided by 12 to get a monthly equivalent. Quarterly subscriptions are divided by 3. SubChecks then sums these up to give you your true average monthly spend.
Can I export my subscription data?
Yes. Pro users can export their subscription data as a CSV file for use in a spreadsheet or other tools. The export includes subscription name, amount, billing cycle, category, and project.
What is the billing cycle distribution chart?
This chart shows what proportion of your subscriptions are monthly, annual, quarterly, or weekly. It helps you understand how much of your spend is locked into annual commitments versus flexible monthly plans.