Some subscriptions make cancelling deliberately hard: hidden cancel pages, retention loops that keep offering you discounts, email-only cancellation, vague billing descriptors you don't recognize, or services that keep charging after you thought you cancelled. The fix is usually not a magic button — it's saying the right thing, in the right place, with the right evidence on hand.
Paste the service, the amount, and what's blocking you. Bill Vampire opens a free case preview with: the known cancel path, the refund window, a support angle, your next moves, and a downloadable summary — no bank login. The optional $4.99 Emergency Kit turns it into exact refund/cancel copy, support-chat phrasing, a chargeback checklist, and reminder text.
What makes a cancellation actually stick
- Cancel in the right place. App Store / Google Play subscriptions are cancelled in those settings — not in the app. Direct subscriptions are cancelled in the service's own account area.
- Get it in writing. Save the confirmation screen, the cancellation email, and any confirmation number.
- Hold your ground in retention loops. A polite, firm "please proceed with cancellation rather than a discount" beats clicking through five "are you sure?" screens.
- Watch the next billing date. Cancelling usually keeps access until the period ends; set a reminder to confirm no further charge hits.
Frequently asked questions
How do I cancel a subscription that won't let me cancel?
Identify where it's billed (App Store, Google Play, or direct), cancel in that location, and if a retention flow blocks you, send a written cancellation request and keep the confirmation. The generator gives you the exact wording.
What if they keep charging after I cancel?
Keep your cancellation confirmation, then dispute the post-cancellation charge with the wording in the Emergency Kit; the confirmation is your evidence.