How to cancel a free trial before it charges
Free trials convert to paid subscriptions at the end of the trial period — usually automatically, unless you cancel first. This is the single most common source of 'wait, why am I being charged for this?' credit card statements. The subscription economy runs on this. Companies give you a free trial, you forget to cancel, you get charged for a month (or year), you don't notice for a couple months, and by then it's too late to get a refund. The good news: there are specific strategies to prevent this, and if you already got charged, there are ways to get your money back. Here's the actual approach.
Set up a trial cancellation reminder system
The single most effective prevention: a calendar reminder 2-3 days before any free trial ends.
When you sign up for a free trial:
1. Note the trial end date (it's in the signup confirmation email)
2. Set a calendar reminder 2-3 days before
3. Decide before that date: keep or cancel
4. If cancel: do it before the deadline
Most calendar apps let you create reminders that repeat or have custom alerts. Use them.
Even better: use a dedicated tool for this.
- Truebill/Rocket Money: tracks free trials and alerts you
- Bobby (iOS): subscription tracker
- A simple spreadsheet: trial name, signup date, end date, decision
The 2-3 days before deadline is the right timing because:
- Some companies have grace periods (you can cancel day-of without being charged)
- Gives you time to make a real decision
- Prevents the 'I forgot' panic at 11pm the night before
Use a virtual credit card for trial signups
Virtual credit cards let you set spending limits and expiration dates on individual card numbers. Perfect for trials.
Privacy.com (US, free):
- Generates virtual card numbers for individual merchants
- Set spending limits per card
- Pause or close cards anytime
- A $1 limit on a trial card means the conversion can't charge more than $1
Capital One Eno / Citi Virtual Cards:
- Similar functionality for existing cardholders
- Generates merchant-specific numbers
- Can set limits and expirations
Bank of America ShopSafe:
- Similar for BofA customers
- Temporary card numbers with limits
The principle: even if you forget to cancel, the card declines when the trial converts. You notice immediately instead of 30 days later when you review your statement.
This works for any subscription, not just trials. Set a $1 limit on a card linked to a recurring subscription you want to 'soft-cancel' — when the limit hits, you'll know to handle it.
Cancel before the deadline — specific steps
Each service has its own cancellation process, but the general pattern:
For most subscriptions:
1. Log into the account
2. Go to 'Account Settings' or 'Subscription'
3. Look for 'Cancel' or 'Manage Subscription'
4. Follow the prompts
5. Confirm cancellation
For trials specifically:
- You usually keep access until the trial period ends
- Cancellation prevents the charge at end of trial
- You don't lose access immediately
For app store trials:
- Cancel through Settings (iPhone) or Google Play (Android)
- Not through the app itself
- Same process as canceling regular subscriptions
Don't wait until the last hour. Some systems have quirks — like requiring a 'reason for cancellation' or offering retention deals. Give yourself time to navigate these.
Confirm: after canceling, check your email for a cancellation confirmation. Save it. If they charge you anyway, you have proof.
If you forgot and got charged — get a refund
If you forgot to cancel and got charged for a trial conversion, you still have options.
Steps to recover:
1. Contact the company's customer support immediately
2. Explain that you forgot to cancel and want a refund
3. Be polite but firm
4. Reference the specific charge and trial terms
5. Many companies will refund the first month if you ask nicely and you haven't used the service much
Companies are often more lenient than their terms suggest. The cost of refunding a single $9.99 charge is less than the cost of a chargeback, so they'll often just do it.
If the company won't refund:
- Dispute the charge with your credit card company
- Cite 'I did not intend to continue this service beyond the trial period'
- Bank may reverse the charge
What to avoid:
- Lying about the circumstances
- Aggressive or hostile tone with customer service
- Using the service extensively after the trial ended
Be honest. 'I forgot to cancel and don't want this' is a legitimate reason most companies will accommodate.
Watch for 'sneaky' trial conversions
Some companies are more aggressive than others about hiding the auto-renew terms:
Watch for:
- Pre-checked boxes during signup (some trial signups have 'auto-renew' checked by default)
- 'Free for 30 days, then $X' in fine print
- Annual conversions for monthly-priced trials
- Free trials that require a credit card but convert silently
If you read the terms and the trial auto-renews at $99.99/year after 14 days, that's your cue to:
- Set a calendar reminder day 12
- Decide immediately: keep or cancel
- Cancel before day 14 if you don't want it
The most aggressive trial conversions:
- Audible: 1-month free, converts to annual
- Various 'free for X days' trials with annual conversions
- Software trials that require credit card
Always read the trial terms. Not the 'free trial' headline — the actual fine print about what happens when it ends.
Build a sustainable trial policy
Free trials are useful for evaluating services before committing. The trick is having a system that lets you use them without getting burned.
My system:
1. Only start a trial when I genuinely plan to evaluate the service during the trial period
2. Set the calendar reminder immediately
3. Use a virtual card with a $1 limit
4. Decide before the deadline: keep, cancel, or convert to annual
5. Document the decision in my subscription tracker
If you're the type to forget, be more conservative with trials. Only sign up for services you're pretty sure you'll keep.
If you're already in too many trials, prioritize:
- Cancel any you're not actively using
- Cancel any that convert to annual
- Keep any you actually use
- Set up a tracker for ongoing management
The goal: be in control of your subscriptions, not the other way around.
Citations & External Resources
This guide was researched using authoritative sources. For further reading, explore the references below:
Frequently Asked Questions
How to cancel a free trial before it charges?
Free trial conversions are how most people get surprise subscription charges. Here's how to cancel before they hit, plus recovery options if they... For more practical tips, check out our guide on How to stop kids from making in-app purchases.
What is the best way to cancel a free trial before it charges?
The best way to cancel a free trial before it charges is to follow a systematic step-by-step approach. Free trials convert to paid subscriptions at the end of the trial period — usually automatically, unless you cancel first. This is the single most common source of 'wait, why am I being charged for... You might also find our guide on How to stop kids from making in-app purchases helpful.
How long does it take to cancel a free trial before it charges?
Most people can cancel a free trial before it charges within 7 minutes of consistent practice. The exact timeline depends on your starting point and how diligently you follow the steps in this guide. For more help, read our related guide: How to stop kids from making in-app purchases.