Which AI subscription should I cancel?
If you pay for two or more AI tools, you are probably overlapping. Here is how to decide what to keep — and what to drop.
1. Are you paying for variety?
The most common reason people hold several subscriptions is to compare answers or switch models. If that is you, a single all-in-one plan that runs multiple models side by side replaces the stack for one price — and you can cancel the rest. See best all-in-one.
2. Keep a single-vendor plan only for a unique feature
Cancel duplicates, but keep one specialist plan if you genuinely rely on a feature no one else matches — a particular image or voice mode, deep research, or tight Office integration. Check the matrix to confirm the feature is actually unique.
3. Match the plan to your real usage
If you rarely hit limits, drop to a cheaper tier or a free tier. If you hit them daily, one strong paid plan beats two half-used ones. Be honest about how often you actually hit the limits.
4. The quick rule
Most individuals need one general subscription. Pay for a second only if it wins a category you use every day. Everything else is a candidate to cancel.