Streaming Cost Tracker

Streaming & Cord-Cutting
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Streaming Cost Tracker

Select every subscription you're paying for. We'll calculate your real monthly and annual spend — then show you exactly where you're overpaying and what to cut or switch.

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Streaming Money Guide

Why Most People Underestimate Their Streaming Bill

Studies consistently find that people underestimate their total subscription spend by 30–40%. The reason is simple: subscriptions are designed to be invisible. Each individual charge is small enough to dismiss, free trials roll into paid plans quietly, and price increases arrive in an email most people ignore. By the time you add everything up, the average US household is spending over $130 per month on streaming and subscriptions.

The biggest sources of waste are services with significant overlap (multiple live TV bundles, or both Hulu and Hulu Live TV), premium ad-free tiers where the cheaper ad-supported tier would serve you equally well, and services you signed up for one show that ended months ago. This tracker surfaces all three.

Prices shown are the standard monthly rates as of March 2026. Edit any price to match your actual bill — some plans are grandfathered at lower rates, or you may be on a promotional or bundled price. Your custom prices are used for all calculations.

The Disney Bundle: Biggest Money-Saver Most People Miss

The Disney Bundle (Disney+ + Hulu + ESPN+) costs $25.99/month with ads or $38.99/month without ads. Subscribing to all three services separately costs $26.97/month with ads — only $1/month more, but the no-ads bundle saves up to $14/month versus buying all three ad-free individually ($52.97/month). If you have two of the three Disney Bundle services, you are almost certainly overpaying.

Similar bundle logic applies to Amazon: Amazon Prime ($14.99/month) includes Prime Video, free two-day shipping, Prime Music, Prime Reading, and free Twitch subscription. If you are paying $8.99/month for Prime Video standalone and also paying for Amazon shipping, switching to full Prime membership saves money immediately.

Ad-Supported vs Ad-Free: Is It Worth the Premium?

Most major streaming services now offer an ad-supported tier at a significantly lower price. The actual ad experience varies considerably.

Netflix with Ads ($7.99)Save $7.50/mo vs Standard

4–5 minutes of ads per hour. Same content library with minor exceptions (some licensed titles unavailable in ads tier). Full HD quality. For most viewers this is a perfectly acceptable trade-off.

Hulu with Ads ($7.99)Save $10/mo vs No Ads

Ads on most content. Some on-demand content is ad-free even on the ads tier. Hulu's ad load is heavier than Netflix — 8–12 minutes per hour on some content.

Max with Ads ($9.99)Save $6/mo vs Ad-Free

Approximately 4 minutes of ads per hour. HBO Original content is ad-free even on the ads tier — ads only appear on Warner Bros. and other licensed content.

Disney+ with Ads ($7.99)Save $6/mo vs No Ads

Around 4 minutes of ads per hour. Children's content (Marvel, Pixar, Disney Animation) is entirely ad-free even on the ads tier — only general content carries ads.

Peacock with Ads ($7.99)Save $6/mo vs Premium Plus

Moderate ad load — 5 minutes per hour. Live sports on Peacock are included on the ads tier. Premium Plus adds downloads and live NBC local channels.

Paramount+ Essential ($5.99)Save $6/mo vs Premium

CBS shows have ads; Paramount+ originals are ad-free. Essential tier does not include Showtime content or local CBS live. For Paramount originals only, Essential is sufficient.

Frequently Asked Questions