Most People Don’t Know What They’re Actually Paying For
You’ve probably got streaming services, cloud storage, fitness apps, and telecom subscriptions scattered across different payment methods. Most of us do. The problem? We don’t actually look at them. A subscription you forgot about costs the same every month as one you actively use — and that’s the trap.
That’s why a quarterly audit isn’t just helpful — it’s essential. Not a monthly check-in (who has time for that?), but a focused 20-minute review every three months. We’re going to show you exactly how.
The Four-Step Quarterly System
Pull Your Last 90 Days of Statements
Check your bank or credit card statements for the past three months. You’re looking for recurring charges — things that happen on the same date every month. Download or screenshot them. Don’t rely on memory.
Cross-Check Your Apps and Accounts
Go into Apple App Store (Settings Subscriptions), Google Play, and any service accounts you use (streaming apps, cloud storage, productivity tools). Some subscriptions hide in app settings where you don’t see them on your statements. You’ll probably find charges you forgot existed.
Mark What You Actually Use
Create a simple spreadsheet or use a notes app. List every subscription and mark it as: Using regularly, Using occasionally, or Haven’t used in weeks. Be honest. That Netflix subscription you haven’t touched in three months? Mark it.
Cancel What Doesn’t Earn Its Keep
If something hasn’t been used in more than a month or two, it’s taking money for nothing. Cancel it. Set a phone reminder for the cancellation date so you don’t get charged for another month. You can always resubscribe later if you need it.
About This Article
This article is educational material designed to help you understand your subscription habits and recurring charges. It’s not financial advice. Circumstances vary by individual, and you should consult with a financial advisor if you have specific concerns about your budget or subscription strategy. Information is current as of April 2026.
Schedule It Like Any Other Appointment
The system only works if you actually do it. Set a calendar reminder for the same date every quarter — say, the first Monday of April, July, October, and January. That consistency matters. It’s 20 minutes four times a year. Block it off. Treat it like a bill payment meeting with yourself.
You’re not just saving money. You’re building awareness. After a couple of quarters, you’ll naturally think twice before subscribing to something. You’ll know what you’re signing up for because you’ve actually tracked it.
What This Actually Saves
Let’s be real about numbers. If you’ve got 5-8 subscriptions (which is pretty typical for Hong Kong consumers), and you’re not actively using 2-3 of them, that’s roughly HK$200-500 per month going nowhere. Over a year? That’s HK$2,400-6,000 sitting in accounts you forgot existed.
The quarterly audit catches that. Not once. Not after a year of bleeding money. Every three months, you get another chance to stop the waste. Even if you only cancel one subscription per quarter, you’re looking at HK$600-1,000 back in your account annually. That’s real money. That’s a meal out, or savings, or something you actually want to spend on.
Make It a Habit, Not a One-Time Thing
One audit is good. Doing it once and then forgetting? That’s where most people fail. The quarterly system is different because it’s built to stick. Four times a year, you’re back in control. Four times a year, you’re making an active choice about your money instead of letting autopay decide for you.
Start with your next quarter. Block the time. Pull your statements. You’ll probably find something you didn’t even remember paying for. That’s the moment the system proves itself.
Ready to understand your subscription landscape better?
Read Our Guide to Finding Every Subscription You’re Paying For