iPhone and iPad

See what your subscriptions actually cost

Most people underestimate their subscription spend by a wide margin. Recurly adds it up, tells you before money leaves your account, and catches the price rises nobody emails you about.

One payment. No subscription to track your subscriptions.

Everything in one place

Add a subscription once. Recurly does the arithmetic and the remembering.

One honest number

Weekly, quarterly and yearly plans all normalise to a real monthly figure, so a 120 euro annual plan sits next to a 10 euro monthly one and you can compare them.

Warned before you pay

Pick how many days of notice you want on each subscription. Quiet hours hold overnight alerts until morning instead of waking you up about Netflix.

Price rises get caught

Update a cost and Recurly logs the old one. The history chart shows exactly when each service put its price up and by how much.

Trials that do not surprise you

Set the trial end date and get an alert two days before it turns into a bill, while cancelling is still free.

Where it all goes

Spend by category, your priciest services ranked by yearly cost, and a what if calculator that shows the annual saving before you cancel anything.

A calendar of charges

Every upcoming payment on a month grid, so you can see the week where four renewals land together before it happens.

How it works, without the sales pitch

Two things worth knowing before you buy.

You type your subscriptions in. Recurly never touches your bank.

There is no bank connection and no Plaid integration, so Recurly cannot read your transactions and cannot miss a subscription you paid for in a way it did not recognise. You add each one, which takes about ten seconds with autocomplete for 400 popular services. In exchange, nothing about your banking ever leaves your control.

The tradeoff is real: Recurly only knows what you tell it. If you forget a subscription, it stays forgotten.

Your data syncs through Firebase, and we say so plainly.

Everything works offline and lives on your device first. When you add an account, your subscriptions sync across your iPhone and iPad through Google Firebase, which means they survive a lost phone. That also means the data is stored on Google servers under your account rather than only on your device.

We are not going to claim your data never leaves your phone, because that would not be true. Read the privacy policy for the specifics of what is stored.

One price, paid once

Recurly costs less than most of the subscriptions it will find for you.

$7.99
Paid once. No in app purchases, no subscription, no ads.
  • Unlimited subscriptions
  • Charge reminders and trial alerts
  • Price history and spending analytics
  • Home screen and lock screen widgets
  • Sync across your devices
  • Export to CSV, JSON or PDF
Coming to the App Store

Requires iOS 17 or later.

Questions

Do I have to connect my bank?

No, and you cannot. Recurly has no bank integration at all. You add subscriptions yourself, with autocomplete for around 400 popular services to make it quick.

Does it find subscriptions I forgot about?

No. Apps that do that read your bank transactions, which Recurly deliberately cannot do. Recurly tracks what you tell it and does the arithmetic you would otherwise do in your head.

Where is my data stored?

On your device first, so the app works with no signal. If you create an account, your subscriptions also sync through Google Firebase so they survive a lost phone. You can delete your account and all of its data from Settings at any time.

Which currencies does it support?

Euro, US dollar, British pound, Canadian dollar, Australian dollar, Swiss franc, Swedish krona, Norwegian krone, Danish krone, Polish zloty and Japanese yen. Recurly does not convert between them, because you enter every cost by hand and inventing an exchange rate would only make the total wrong.

Is there an Android version?

Not today. Recurly is built for iPhone and iPad.

What happens if I stop paying you?

Nothing. You pay once and the app is yours. There is no tier that expires and no feature that switches off.