Subscriptions are the silent drain on British bank accounts. According to a 2025 report by Barclays, the average UK adult spends £620 per year on subscriptions — streaming services, gym memberships, app subscriptions, food boxes, beauty boxes, cloud storage, news sites, and more. But here's the critical finding: 41% of subscribers are paying for at least one service they've forgotten about or no longer use. That's £254 per year — over £21 per month — going to companies for services delivering zero value. The subscription model has exploded because businesses discovered that recurring revenue is easier to maintain than one-off purchases. Once you've entered your card details and clicked "start free trial," inertia does the rest. You forget to cancel, the trial converts to paid, and the direct debit disappears into the noise of your bank statement. Barclays estimated that UK consumers collectively waste £2.3 billion annually on unused subscriptions. That's not a rounding error — it's a structural feature of how modern commerce exploits behavioural inertia. An annual subscription audit is the single highest-return financial activity most people can do: 30 minutes of work that saves hundreds per year.
How much does the average UK person spend on subscriptions?+
According to Barclays, the average UK adult spends £620 per year on subscriptions. Around 41% of subscribers pay for at least one service they've forgotten about or no longer use, wasting approximately £254 annually.
How do I find all my active subscriptions?+
Check your bank statements for three months, review Apple/Google subscription settings, check PayPal recurring payments, and look for any direct debits or continuous payment authorities on your bank account. Most banking apps can filter for recurring payments.
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