
Between the grocery bill and the rent payment on the typical American’s bank statement, there is typically a collection of tiny, recurring charges that most people are unable to fully account for. This is eight dollars. There are twelve. a fifteen-dollar monthly fee for a product that was downloaded during a free trial eighteen months ago but was never properly cancelled. Each of the fees is small enough that none of them draws the kind of attention that a big, one-time expense would. However, CNET’s 2024 data shows that the average American adult spends about $91 a month on subscriptions. This amount would cause much more thought if it were presented as a single annual bill rather than spread out over twelve monthly statements.
This is not a coincidence. The subscription economy, which has grown significantly over the last ten years, was founded on a real realization: consumers prefer small monthly expenses to big upfront payments. Each of these shifts—Netflix in 2007, Spotify in 2008, and Adobe’s switch to Creative Cloud in 2013—made a convincing case for access and convenience over ownership. The pitch made sense. However, the model changed from providing value to capturing customers somewhere between the first legitimate subscription service and the current state of the market, and it became harder to tell the tools used for that capture from intentional manipulation.
| Topic | The Subscription Trap: How Tech Companies Are Locking in Consumers |
| Scale of Impact | Average American adult spends $91/month on subscriptions (CNET 2024); 16.8 million UK adults signed up to subscription services via continuous payment authorities 2014–2015; 84% of surveyed consumers did not realize they had agreed to a subscription (Citizens Advice) |
| Dark Patterns Used | 89% of subscription services use at least one dark pattern in cancellation flows; “Roach Motel” design (easy in, difficult out); pre-ticked checkboxes; trick questions; hidden terms; phone-only cancellations for online-purchased services; “confirm shaming” (guilt-based retention) |
| Key Examples | Adobe: Photoshop moved from ~$700 one-time purchase to monthly subscription costing $2,600+ over several years with no ownership. BMW/Tesla: subscription fees for features already installed in owned vehicles. Gaming: Nintendo’s eShop closure erased access to games already paid for |
| Psychological Mechanisms | Payment depreciation (small recurring charges become “background noise”); loss aversion (fear of losing data/access outweighs cost concern); endowment effect and dependency through proprietary ecosystems (Adobe, Spotify, HP Instant Ink); cultivated switching costs |
| Consumer Backlash | Average US household subscriptions dropped from 4.1 to 2.8 in 2025 (Self Financial); 42% of US consumers cancelled at least one subscription in six months (CivicScience 2025); 47% cancelled streaming services citing “declining perceived value” (Deloitte 2025) |
| Reference | Citizens Advice — Locked In: Consumer Issues with Subscription Traps (citizensadvice.org.uk) |
In consumer research, these strategies are referred to as “dark patterns”—interface decisions made with the express purpose of influencing behavior in ways that benefit the business at the expense of the user. The most well-known version of subscription services is sometimes referred to as the “Roach Motel” because it only requires a few clicks to sign up, which is frequently finished in less than two minutes with a card number and a hopeful click through terms that no one reads. It requires something completely different to cancel. Eighty-four percent of customers who signed up for subscription services through continuous payment authorities were unaware that they had committed to a subscription, according to Citizens Advice, which has been monitoring subscription trap behavior in the UK since at least 2016. According to a 2022 consumer research study, 89% of subscription services employ at least one dark pattern in their cancellation process. Typical examples include hiding the cancellation button behind multiple pages of retention offers, requiring a phone call to cancel a service that was fully purchased online, and using “confirm shaming” language to make users feel guilty when they try to quit. These strategies are purposefully layered. One friction point may be disregarded. When seven consecutive friction points are applied to someone who simply wants to stop paying for something they no longer use, the result is something more akin to hopelessness.
Regulatory agencies used Amazon Prime as a case study. In 2021, the Norwegian Consumer Council filed a complaint after finding that it only took a few clicks to subscribe to Prime, but it took at least seven steps to unsubscribe. Sixteen European consumer organizations were involved in the case. In the end, it led to Amazon changing its cancellation policy for EU customers, which is noticeably different from what American customers went through. This raises clear questions about what factors influence how difficult it is for a company to leave.
Adobe offers an alternative, yet equally illuminating, perspective on the issue. In order to make professional tools more accessible, the company changed Photoshop and its Creative Suite from perpetual licenses to a subscription-only model in 2013. And it was, in certain respects. However, for users who had previously purchased the software for about $700 and owned it outright, the math of the transition over several years of monthly fees resulted in a total cost exceeding $2,600. They increased their spending. They had nothing. Losing access to years’ worth of files kept in proprietary formats was another consequence of leaving Adobe’s ecosystem; this is a feature of the lock-in, not a coincidence. The same reasoning holds for HP’s Instant Ink service, Spotify’s carefully chosen playlists, and the variety of smart devices that need regular subscriptions in order to function. The cost of switching is more than just the price of a rival product once a user is deeply ingrained in a proprietary ecosystem. It’s the price of abandoning everything.
The backlash from consumers has been quantifiable and has become more inconvenient for businesses whose revenue models were based on captured customers. Over the course of 2025, the average US household’s number of paid subscriptions decreased by almost a third, from 4.1 to 2.8. In six months, 42% of American consumers cancelled at least one subscription; most of them cited diminishing perceived value in relation to cost. Similar figures were found for streaming alone in Deloitte’s 2025 Digital Media Trends survey. After a promotional trial, automatically enrolling users in full-priced subscriptions attracted about 25% fewer long-term subscribers than models that allowed users to choose to continue, according to University of Chicago research on auto-renewal practices. The lead researcher stated, “You just can’t simply force people to love you.” This seems like a clear conclusion, but it apparently required a field experiment to register in boardrooms.
Slowly, regulators have begun to take action. The UK’s Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024 mandates renewal reminders and makes cancellation as simple as signing up. In 2025, California revised its Automatic Renewal Law. Retention screens intended to make cancellation psychologically taxing were outlawed in Minnesota. A settlement was reached by thirty-three US states against TFG Holding for enrolling customers in subscriptions without their express consent. It’s difficult to ignore the fact that each of these actions describes something that the companies in question should have done on their own volition, but they didn’t until the law demanded it.
The speed at which some businesses have responded to regulatory pressure gives the impression that technical complexity was never the cause of the cancellation friction. It was a business choice. For a while, it was effective, but eventually, customers began to cancel first and evaluate later.
