Subby

Why subscription tracking pays for itself

The average phone now holds two dozen recurring charges. Streaming, music, productivity, AI assistants, cloud storage, dating apps, gym apps, and the seven-day trials that quietly converted last winter. Most of them are small individually. Together, they outpace household utilities for a lot of people.

Subscription tracker apps for Android solve three specific things: they tell you what you are actually paying for each month, they warn you before a free trial converts, and a few of them will negotiate or cancel on your behalf. The category split between dedicated trackers (Subby, Bobby) and budgeting apps with subscription features (Rocket Money, Spendee, Wallet) — both work, and which you pick depends on whether you want the focused tool or the wider money app.

These seven Android subscription tracker apps are what we tested over the last quarter. Two are paid-only, the rest have real free tiers.

What to look for in a subscription tracker app

Quick comparison

AppBest forPlatformsFree planStarting priceStandout
SubbyDedicated trackerAndroid, iOSYes$2.99/mo ProMulti-currency dashboard
Rocket MoneyAuto-detect plus cancelAndroid, iOS, webYes, basics$6/mo PremiumCancels subscriptions for you
SpendeeBudget plus subsAndroid, iOS, webYes$2.99/mo PlusShared budgets with partner
Wallet by BudgetBakersAll-in-one money managerAndroid, iOS, webYes$2.99/moBank sync in 30+ countries
Money Manager EXOpen-source managerAndroid, Windows, Mac, LinuxYesNoneFree forever, no cloud
Recurring Expense TrackerOpen-source minimalAndroidYesNoneF-Droid build, no ads
PocketGuardSpending awarenessAndroid, iOSYes$7.99/mo”In My Pocket” daily safe-to-spend
BobbyiOS-focused, light Android webiOS, webYes$1.99 one-timeClean visual subscription tiles

The apps

1. Subby, best dedicated Android subscription tracker

Subby is the dedicated subscription tracker that earns its keep on Android. The dashboard shows monthly, annual, and combined totals; the reminder system catches free-trial conversions; and multi-currency support handles SaaS subscriptions billed in USD, EUR, and GBP without the math.

Entry is manual rather than bank-sync, which is the trade-off for keeping the data local. The Pro tier adds custom categories, icon packs, and cloud backup.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS

Download: Aptoide Google Play

Bottom line: The cleanest Android-first option if you want a dedicated tracker rather than a wider money app.

2. Rocket Money, best for auto-detect and cancel-for-you

Rocket Money (the former Truebill) is the budgeting app most US users default to because it pulls recurring charges out of your bank transactions automatically and surfaces them in one list. The standout feature is the cancellation service: pay a fee, tell Rocket Money to cancel a subscription, and a human agent does the cancellation call or web form for you.

The Premium tier also handles bill negotiation (cable, phone, gym memberships) and takes a cut of the savings rather than a flat fee.

Where it falls short: US-centric. International bank sync is patchy. The cancellation fee is non-trivial — Rocket Money keeps part of the first year’s savings.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS, web

Download: Aptoide Google Play

Bottom line: Pick Rocket Money if you are in the US and want to find subscriptions you forgot about and cancel them without doing the work.

3. Spendee, best for shared subscriptions with a partner

Spendee is the household budgeting app that handles subscriptions as a first-class category. Couples and roommates share wallets, see who is paying for what, and split recurring charges fairly.

The Android app handles bank sync in over 20 countries through the Plaid/Tink integrations. Subscriptions appear in a dedicated view with renewal dates and total monthly cost.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS, web

Download: Aptoide Google Play

Bottom line: Pick Spendee for shared household subscription tracking.

4. Wallet by BudgetBakers, best all-in-one money manager

Wallet by BudgetBakers is the budgeting app that European users tend to land on after Mint shut down. Bank sync runs in over 30 countries, the subscription detection picks up most recurring charges automatically, and the Plan view forecasts renewals against your incoming cash.

The app handles multiple currencies, multiple accounts, and shared wallets in the Premium tier.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS, web

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: The best European-friendly budgeting app for users who want subscriptions tracked inside a wider money manager.

5. Money Manager EX, best open-source money manager

Money Manager EX is the open-source desktop money manager that ships an Android companion. The Android app handles manual entry, account balances, and recurring transactions. The desktop app handles the deeper reporting.

For users who do not want bank sync on someone else’s servers, this is the only fully offline option that scales beyond manual tracking. Recurring transactions cover the subscription use case directly.

Pricing: Free, open source

Platforms: Android, Windows, Mac, Linux

Download: F-Droid Google Play

Bottom line: Pick Money Manager EX if open-source and offline are non-negotiable.

6. Recurring Expense Tracker, best minimal F-Droid pick

Recurring Expense Tracker is the smallest, simplest, no-account, no-ads option on this list. The whole app is a list of recurring expenses with renewal dates and totals. That is it. The F-Droid build is the audited open-source path.

For someone who wants to see “what am I paying every month” without bank sync, account creation, or any cloud round trip, this is the cleanest option.

Pricing: Free, open source

Platforms: Android

Download: F-Droid Google Play

Bottom line: Pick Recurring Expense Tracker for the lightest privacy-first option.

7. PocketGuard, best for daily spending awareness

PocketGuard focuses on the daily “what is safe to spend today” answer after subtracting bills, subscriptions, and savings goals. The “In My Pocket” headline number lives at the top of the home screen and shrinks as subscriptions tick down through the month.

The subscription tracker auto-detects from bank sync (US and Canada) and flags subscriptions that have increased in price since the last bill.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS

Download: Aptoide Google Play

Bottom line: Pick PocketGuard if you want subscriptions visible inside a “what can I spend today” frame.

8. Bobby, best clean visual tracker (with caveat)

Bobby is the iOS-favourite subscription tracker that earned its reputation for its visual, tile-based layout. The Android side is web-only — the team has not shipped a native Android app — so we include it for users who want the clean Bobby aesthetic via a phone browser or a PWA.

The web app supports the same currency conversion, renewal reminders, and category tagging as the iOS app. Sync between iOS and the web is account-based.

Pricing:

Platforms: iOS (native), web (Android via browser)

Download: App Store

Bottom line: Bobby is included for completeness but pick a native Android option from the list above for the phone-first workflow.

How to pick the right one

FAQ

What is the best free subscription tracker for Android? Subby’s free tier covers most personal use cases without bank sync. Recurring Expense Tracker is fully free and open-source. Rocket Money’s free tier sees subscriptions but does not cancel them.

Can a tracker actually cancel my subscriptions? Rocket Money will cancel US subscriptions on your behalf for a fee. Most other apps surface the renewal but the cancellation is still your job.

Are bank-sync trackers safe? The reputable ones (Rocket Money, Spendee, Wallet) connect through Plaid, Tink, or Salt Edge — the same aggregators banks use for open banking. Your credentials are tokenised. The trade-off is that the aggregator sees your transactions; choose based on whether you accept that.

How often should I review my subscriptions? Monthly is a reasonable baseline. Quarterly catches anything that slipped past, especially annual subscriptions that renew unannounced.

Do these apps work in my country? Bank sync coverage varies. Subby, Money Manager EX, and Recurring Expense Tracker work everywhere because they are manual-entry. Rocket Money is best in the US, Wallet and Spendee cover more European countries, PocketGuard is US/Canada.

Why did Mint shut down? Intuit retired Mint in March 2024 and pushed users to Credit Karma. The replacement does not have Mint’s subscription tracking depth, which is why so many users moved to Rocket Money or Wallet.