Clay Cooper, a wealth management advisor at Clearview Financial Partners, thought he had a solid handle on his budget. Then his credit card company sent his 2025 annual spending summary and he decided to take a closer look.
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“Between my wife and I, we ended up canceling just over a dozen subscriptions once I started digging all around,” Cooper said. He mentioned this to his boomer business partner, who ran the same exercise and canceled nearly two dozen subscriptions. With that in mind, here are 10 autopay bills that could be ruining boomers’ budgets.
Streaming subscriptions fly under the radar because individual charges seem small. Netflix, Hulu, Disney+, HBO Max and others add up quickly when you’re paying for multiple services.
Many were started during higher-earning years and never revisited. Cooper said when payments are automatic, there’s no friction and no prompt to reassess value.
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Gym memberships, yoga apps, fitness trackers and wellness platforms continue charging monthly, even when you stop using them. These subscriptions often renew annually, sometimes at higher rates.
Many retirees pay for storage they don’t need or use via Google Drive, Dropbox, iCloud and other cloud storage services.
Digital newspaper subscriptions, magazine apps and news aggregators stack up over time. Cooper recommended asking a simple question for each one: “Am I actually using this?”
Trimming $50 to $150 per month in forgotten subscriptions can free up meaningful cash flow over a year, he said.
For retirees who spend winters in warmer climates, timeshares can be part of the lifestyle. Annual maintenance fees often rise 3% to 5% per year, and those increases can slip by unnoticed on autopay.
Cooper encouraged an annual review of the current fee, how much it has increased and how often the property is actually used. Sometimes autopay has simply masked creeping costs.
Geoff Balkcom, president of BAI Financial, said cutting cable has become the latest phenomenon among his retired clients. With the rise of streaming services, high cable bills have become obsolete in many households.
“Anywhere dollars can be saved and kept in my client’s pockets rather than allocated to monthly living expenses is always encouraged,” Balkcom said.
Cable bills often creep up through equipment fees, broadcast surcharges and channel package increases that happen automatically.
Balkcom also mentioned landlines as an expense retirees should reconsider. Cellphones have replaced the need for home phone service in most households.
Landline bills can run $30 to $50 per month for service many retirees rarely use. That’s $360 to $600 annually for a phone that mostly receives robocalls.
Daniel Pifer, a partner and private wealth advisor at Northwestern Mutual’s Heartwood Planning Group, said many retirees continue paying for life insurance they no longer need.
Once mortgages are paid off and children are financially independent, large life insurance policies may no longer serve the same purpose. Reviewing coverage in the context of estate planning and legacy goals can prevent unnecessary premium payments.
Retirees typically drive less, yet maintaining an extra car means ongoing insurance, maintenance and registration costs. Pifer said consolidating vehicles can be a simple way to reduce annual expenses.
The second car often sits in the driveway while insurance, registration and maintenance bills continue on autopay. Selling it eliminates hundreds or thousands in annual costs.
Many retirees are eligible for senior discounts or lower-tier plans that better reflect their usage. Pifer said a quick review of telecom bills can often reveal easy savings.
Cooper explained how charges slip through even when you think you’re paying attention. Half his charges were quarterly or annual instead of monthly so he missed them when periodically checking his credit card. Others were bundled into bills like his cellphone.
“A few were easy to cancel online. Others required digging through customer service portals and multiple 1-800 calls,” he said. It took him nearly a week to unwind them all.
Cooper believes these companies don’t want to make it easy to cancel. For retirees living on fixed incomes, autopay can quietly erode a budget faster than most realize.
Cooper explained that in retirement, budgeting shifts from monthly tracking to annual cash flow planning. Income is often fixed through Social Security, pensions and portfolio withdrawals. That makes expense creep more impactful.
One strategy he recommended is creating a retirement paycheck where a set amount transfers into checking each month. It creates structure and improves visibility.
“Autopay is not the problem. Invisibility is,” Cooper said. “When money leaves without awareness, it reduces intentionality.”
Many retirees also set up recurring charitable donations during peak income years. The intention is admirable but retirement cash flow is different. Cooper often helps retirees review total annual contributions and structure their giving more intentionally.
Balkcom stressed the importance of avoiding high-interest debt in retirement. Credit card autopay minimums can mask growing balances that eat into fixed income.
Cooper recommended a quarterly review of recurring charges. Even as a financial advisor, he had a dozen subscriptions slip through.
“The goal is not perfection. It is oversight,” he said. A quarterly review can restore control and protect long-term financial confidence.
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This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: I’m a Financial Advisor: Here Are 10 Autopay Bills That Are Ruining Boomers’ Budgets