Technology
How to cancel iPhone app subscriptions
-
You might have several monthly or annual subscriptions
for content or apps billed through iTunes. -
Here’s how you can check what you’re subscribed to
through Apple.
Nobody likes paying for things they don’t use.
So if you’re an iPhone user, you should double-check to make sure
you didn’t accidentally stay subscribed to an app or service you
thought you cancelled.
It’s actually pretty hidden in the App Store — TechCrunch’s Josh
Constine called the
settings “buried” and a “dark pattern design.”
App subscriptions are an emphasis for Apple. It held
an invite-only meeting last year to convince developers to
adopt subscription models, and Apple CEO Tim Cook said that 300
million Apple users are currently subscribed to either an app or
an Apple subscription service, like Apple Music.
Here’s how you
check your subscriptions. You can tap
here if you have the iTunes store installed on your iPhone or
Mac.
Otherwise, you’ll have to fire up the App Store app. You’re
looking for your photo in the corner:
Business
Insider
That will take you to this page. Again, you’ll want to tap on
your user photo.
Business
Insider
After tapping on your account again, you’ll need to enter your
password, scan your fingerprint, or use Face ID to get to the
next page. You’re looking for “Subscriptions,” which should be on
the lower half of your screen:
Business
Insider
That will bring you to the subscriptions screen. Tapping anything
on this list will tell you how much you’re spending, when it
renews next, and the opportunity to cancel or change the
settings.
Business
Insider
Here’s what the subscription screen for Apple Music looks like:
Business
Insider
There are more details and options at Apple’s website, but you’ll
be able to similarly cancel your unwanted subscriptions.
-
Business6 days ago
UnitedHealth says Change hackers stole health data on ‘substantial proportion of people in America’
-
Business5 days ago
Tesla’s new growth plan is centered around mysterious cheaper models
-
Business7 days ago
Mood.camera is an iOS app that feels like using a retro analog camera
-
Business4 days ago
Xaira, an AI drug discovery startup, launches with a massive $1B, says it’s ‘ready’ to start developing drugs
-
Business5 days ago
UK probes Amazon and Microsoft over AI partnerships with Mistral, Anthropic, and Inflection
-
Entertainment7 days ago
Furious Watcher fans are blasting it as ‘greedy’ over paid subscription service
-
Business6 days ago
Two widow founders launch DayNew, a social platform for people dealing with grief and trauma
-
Entertainment5 days ago
Tesla’s in trouble. Is Elon Musk the problem?