You're Paying for Things
You Don't Use.
The average person pays for 4+ subscriptions they've forgotten about. TakeBack finds every one of them and makes cancelling effortless.
Takes under 2 minutes. No paperwork. No guesswork.
Find My SubscriptionsThree Steps to Stop the Bleeding
We find the charges
Connect your accounts and TakeBack scans every statement for recurring charges — including the ones buried under vague merchant names you don't recognize.
You see everything at once
One dashboard. Every subscription, what it costs, and how recently you've actually used it. Decide what stays and what goes.
Cancel in seconds
No support emails, no hold music. We give you the exact steps to cancel anything — done in under a minute.
Built to Stop the Leak
Every charge, visible
No more digging through statements. Every recurring charge lands in one clean dashboard, labeled and sorted.
One-tap cancellation
We give you the exact steps to cancel anything. No runaround, no support queues. Out in seconds.
Renewal alerts
We warn you before anything renews. No more surprise charges on a Monday morning.
Stop the Subscription Drain 💸
People who use TakeBack save an average of $273/month.
Find your forgotten subscriptions in under 2 minutes.
Show Me What I'm Paying ForPeople Who Stopped Paying for Nothing
Found 5 subscriptions I completely forgot about. Cancelled 3 of them and saved $87 a month. Took less than two minutes to set up.
Mason Williams
I was still getting charged for a gym membership from 2022. TakeBack caught it the second I connected my account. $180 back in the first month.
James Rodriguez
Seeing all my subscriptions in one place was kind of shocking. Cancelled four I wasn't using and immediately started saving.
Emily Watson
There was a $14.99/month charge I couldn't even identify. TakeBack tracked it down and walked me through cancelling it. $180 a year I was just throwing away.
Sarah Chen
I thought I had my finances under control. Turns out I was paying for 6 things I hadn't touched in months. TakeBack showed me in seconds.
Marcus Johnson
The renewal alerts alone changed everything. I stopped getting blindsided by charges I forgot were coming. Saving over $240 a month now.
Rachel Torres
Common Questions
TakeBack connects securely to your bank or card to scan for recurring charges. We pull every subscription into one dashboard — including the ones buried in your statements — and show you what each one costs, how often you've actually used it, and exactly how to cancel if you want out.
Bank apps show raw transactions — they don't categorize them as subscriptions, flag price increases, or warn you before renewals. TakeBack does all of that automatically and gives you direct cancellation steps. It's the difference between a list and a tool.
We partner with Plaid — the same infrastructure behind Venmo and Robinhood — to securely read your transaction history. Our system detects recurring patterns including free trials that quietly converted to paid plans without you noticing.
Yes. The connection is read-only — we can see your transactions, but we cannot move money or make any changes. Your credentials are encrypted via Plaid and never stored by TakeBack. We built this with the assumption that trust has to be earned, not assumed.
We identify every active subscription and give you direct links and step-by-step instructions to cancel any you want gone. We strip out all the friction so cancelling takes seconds, not a support ticket and three phone transfers.
We offer plans for different needs. The math is simple: you should recover significantly more than you pay us. Most members claw back hundreds of dollars a year just by cutting subscriptions they didn't realize were still running.
Yes. Connect as many accounts as you have. TakeBack catches recurring charges across all of them — so nothing slips through because it's on a card you check less often.
Yes. You can browse and manually track subscriptions without linking anything. Connecting your bank (always optional) unlocks automatic detection and renewal alerts based on your actual transaction history — which is where TakeBack gets really useful.