How to Stop a Recurring Card Payment
Use your bank's tools to block a recurring charge when cancelling fails.
Use your bank's tools to block a recurring charge when cancelling fails. This guide gives you the exact steps plus the rights and gotchas that matter in 2026.
What the rules say
<p>Use your bank's tools to block a recurring charge when cancelling fails. EU consumer law has tightened around subscriptions: clearer cancellation, limits on hard-to-exit 'dark patterns', and in several areas reminder and easy-cancellation requirements. Your exact rights depend on your country's implementation, but the direction is consistently more consumer-friendly.</p>
How to use your rights in practice
<p>Cancel in writing where possible and keep the confirmation. If a company makes cancellation unreasonably difficult, that itself may breach consumer rules. For unauthorised or post-cancellation charges, your bank's dispute process is a backstop.</p>
When to escalate
<p>If a service ignores a valid cancellation or keeps charging you, escalate: contact the provider in writing, then your national consumer protection body or, for card payments, your bank. Document everything.</p>
Prevent the problem next time
<p>Whatever you cancel, keep a list of what you still pay for and when it renews. A free spreadsheet works for a one-time check; for automatic renewal reminders before charges hit, a dedicated tracker like <a href="https://subtracker.io">SubTracker.io</a> is more practical.</p>
Key Takeaways
- →Cancel a day or two before the renewal date to avoid one more charge.
- →Always confirm the cancellation by email and check that auto-renew is off.
- →If you subscribed through an app store, cancel there — not on the service's website.
- →Track your remaining subscriptions so none renew unnoticed — a tool like SubTracker.io sends reminders before charges hit.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does it take?
Usually just a few minutes once you know where the subscription is billed. App-store and direct-website cancellations are fastest; contract-based services may need a notice period.
Will I get a refund?
It depends on the service and your country. In the EU some services offer money-back windows; many do not refund partial periods. Check the terms before expecting a refund.
How do I stop this happening again?
Keep one tracked list of every subscription with its renewal date and price. A spreadsheet works for a one-off audit; for automatic reminders, a tracker like SubTracker.io is more practical.
How many subscriptions are you actually paying for?
The average person pays for 12+ subscriptions. See yours in one place.