the product

a decision tool. not a cancellation service.

why this product exists

most subscription trackers automate away the part of the decision that actually matters — the moment you stop and ask "is this worth what it costs?" we built the opposite. NAS surfaces what you're paying for, names the retention traps you'll hit on the way out, and gets out of your way.

the three lists — keep, watch, drop — are what you walk away with. every subscription you have ends up in one of them. the three ways — the manual, the one-time way, the subscription — are how data gets in. they are not the same axis. we never sell a list, and we never put the ways in the product nav.

why the subscription exists at all
the subscription is the one we said we'd never make. it's a standing bank connection from a product that named itself "not another subscription". we made it anyway, because some users want NAS to keep working without re-entering data — and an honest standing connection beats a dishonest one-time scan that pretends not to be ongoing.
the subscription, explained

6 months in. then we ask.

the subscription that asks for permission.

but if we were going to ship one, we were going to ship the one we'd want to buy. that's why auto-renewal defaults to off: at the end of every 6-month cycle, NAS asks if you want another one. no quiet draws. no dark-pattern reactivation flow. you opt in, or it stops.

you can switch auto-renewal on later if the asking gets old. most users won't.

we made it the way we'd want one made.

principles

three rules. non-negotiable.

the lists are what you walk away with. the way is how you got there.

every NAS user, regardless of how they pay, ends up with the same three lists: keep, watch, drop. how the data enters — manually, in one go, or via standing connection — is packaging, not feature.

we surface. you cancel.

NAS never accesses your provider accounts and never cancels on your behalf. we point at the cancel button; you tap it. that distinction is the legal shield and the moral one.

no recurring data access we don't need.

the manual takes no bank data, ever. the one-time way reads once and disconnects. the subscription is the only standing connection — and the only way where the inversion is explicit.

the product

one decision, three lists.

every subscription you have ends up in one of three lists. you decide which.

keep

subs you've decided are worth what they cost.

  • Spotify Family 99 kr
calendar / forecast view for upcoming charges.

watch

subs on the deferred-decision clock.

  • Audible 129 kr
    21 days left
revisit before the timer runs out.

drop

subs you're ready to end.

  • Adobe CC 619 kr
    provider site ↗
per-provider playbook included. retention traps named.

what each way does

what each way does
the manual

you type your subs and renewal dates. NAS sorts them with you into the three lists. nothing connects to your bank. capped at 5 subs; no time limit.

the one-time way

we read your banks once, surface every subscription, sort them with you into the three lists, project the annual cost, and disconnect. one charge. the report is yours to keep.

the subscription

everything in the one-time way, plus standing bank connections. 49 kr/month, 6-month binding, then we ask. budgeting tools included.

three lists. three ways. one decision.

trust signals

EU / GDPR
data stays in the EU
AISP partner
regulated bank-data access (partner pending)
end-to-end encryption
where applicable
bank-grade security
no credential storage, ever