The quick warning
A single £16–£20 monthly AI subscription may not feel like much. But three paid AI tools can cost roughly £576–£720 a year. Add writing, design, meeting-note or image-generation tools, and some households could be spending close to £1,000 a year without realising it.
It often starts with one subscription. ChatGPT for writing. Canva Pro for designs. Grammarly for emails. Claude for longer documents. Perplexity for research. Microsoft Copilot for work. Maybe Midjourney, Notion AI, Otter, Descript or another tool on top.
Each one seems useful. Each one feels small. But together, they can quietly become a major new bill.
And the most dangerous part? Many people do not think of AI as a subscription problem at all.
Why this is happening now
AI is no longer niche. Almost half of the UK public has now proactively used a generative AI tool, according to Deloitte’s 2025 UK digital consumer research. That means AI has moved from “something tech people use” to something ordinary households, workers, students, freelancers and jobseekers are experimenting with every week.
At the same time, Britain already has a subscription problem. Barclays research says 88% of UK consumers have at least one subscription, with subscribers spending an average of £50.60 per month.
Now AI is being layered on top of streaming, cloud storage, mobile extras, fitness apps, premium delivery, software, news apps and insurance add-ons.
MoneyMagpie expert warning
The risk is not that one AI tool is expensive. The risk is that households build an “AI stack” without noticing.
One tool for writing, one for research, one for design, one for work, one for notes, one for images — and suddenly AI costs more than your TV subscriptions.
The AI stack problem nobody is talking about
In the business world, people talk about their “tech stack” or “AI stack”. That means the collection of tools they use to get work done.
But households do not need a bloated AI stack.
Most people need:
- one general AI assistant;
- possibly one specialist tool they use regularly;
- free versions for everything else.
What many people actually have is:
- one AI tool they use daily;
- two they use occasionally;
- two they forgot they were paying for;
- one annual plan due to renew without warning.
That is where the money disappears.
What popular AI tools can cost
Prices change regularly and may vary by country, plan, currency and whether you pay monthly or annually. But many popular AI tools now sit around the £10–£25 per month mark.
| Tool type | Examples | Typical cost pattern |
|---|---|---|
| General AI assistant | ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini | Often around $20/month for premium individual plans |
| Research assistant | Perplexity and similar tools | Often around $20/month for pro plans |
| Writing assistant | Grammarly, QuillBot, Jasper | Can range from low annual pricing to higher monthly pricing |
| Design tool | Canva Pro, Adobe AI features | Often monthly or annual plans |
| Image/video AI | Midjourney, Runway, Descript | Often tiered subscriptions or usage credits |
| Workplace productivity AI | Microsoft Copilot, Notion AI, meeting-note apps | Often per-user monthly or annual plans |
The hidden annual cost
| Monthly AI spend | Annual cost |
|---|---|
| £20 | £240 |
| £40 | £480 |
| £60 | £720 |
| £80 | £960 |
| £100 | £1,200 |
The overlap trap: are you paying twice for the same thing?
This is the part many people miss.
AI tools are increasingly overlapping. Different brands may market themselves differently, but many now handle the same core tasks:
- writing emails;
- summarising documents;
- rewriting text;
- brainstorming ideas;
- researching topics;
- creating social posts;
- editing tone;
- planning projects;
- analysing PDFs;
- generating images.
That means you may not be paying for five different abilities. You may be paying five times for similar abilities.
The question to ask
“What does this tool do that my other AI tool cannot?”
If you cannot answer that clearly, you may not need both.
Common AI overlaps to check
| If you pay for… | Check whether it overlaps with… |
|---|---|
| ChatGPT and Claude | Writing, summarising, brainstorming, document analysis |
| ChatGPT and Grammarly | Rewriting, tone, grammar, email drafting |
| Canva Pro and image-generation tools | Social graphics, images, simple design work |
| Perplexity and ChatGPT | Research, summaries, source finding |
| Copilot and other work AI tools | Emails, documents, spreadsheets, meeting summaries |
| Notion AI and a general assistant | Notes, summaries, planning, task organisation |
The workplace trap: are you paying personally for something work already provides?
This is one of the most overlooked AI money leaks.
Many employers are now rolling out AI tools through Microsoft, Google, internal assistants, enterprise ChatGPT-style products or approved productivity platforms.
Before paying personally, check whether your employer already offers:
- Microsoft Copilot access;
- Google Gemini for work accounts;
- ChatGPT Team or Enterprise-style access;
- approved transcription tools;
- approved writing or research tools;
- AI features built into existing software.
Important workplace warning
Do not paste confidential work information, client details, legal documents, medical information, HR files or unpublished business data into public AI tools unless your employer explicitly allows it.
You could be paying personally for a tool you should not be using for work anyway.
The app-store trap
Another reason AI subscriptions are easy to miss is that they may not appear on your bank statement under the AI brand name.
You may have subscribed through:
- Apple App Store;
- Google Play;
- PayPal;
- Stripe;
- a business card;
- a work email address;
- an old personal email address.
That means you may not see “ChatGPT”, “Claude” or “AI tool” clearly on your statement. You might only see Apple, Google, PayPal or a payment processor.
Do this today
Open your iPhone or Android subscription settings and search your email inbox for:
- “AI subscription”
- “trial ending”
- “renewal”
- “invoice”
- “payment successful”
- “your plan”
- “annual billing”
The annual renewal trap
Monthly subscriptions are annoying, but annual renewals can be worse.
A £16–£20 monthly payment is visible. A £150–£250 annual renewal can land suddenly, often at exactly the wrong time.
This is especially risky with AI tools because people often subscribe during a short burst of need:
- writing a CV;
- applying for jobs;
- launching a side hustle;
- working on a university project;
- creating a portfolio;
- building a website;
- preparing a business pitch.
Once the project ends, the subscription continues.
The 15-minute AI subscription audit
Here is the MoneyMagpie AI Subscription Audit. Do it once today, then repeat it every three months.
- Open your banking app.
- Check Apple subscriptions.
- Check Google Play subscriptions.
- Check PayPal automatic payments.
- Search your email for AI receipts.
- List every AI-related payment.
- Cancel anything you have not used in 30 days.
Search for these names
Look for payments or emails mentioning:
- OpenAI
- ChatGPT
- Anthropic
- Claude
- Google AI
- Gemini
- Perplexity
- Microsoft
- Copilot
- Canva
- Grammarly
- Notion
- Midjourney
- Runway
- Descript
- Otter
- ElevenLabs
- Jasper
- QuillBot
- Poe
- Character.AI
- Superhuman
Keep, cancel or rotate?
Keep it if you use it weekly and it clearly saves time, earns money or replaces another paid tool.
Cancel it if you have not used it in 30 days.
Rotate it if you only need it for occasional projects.
The rotation trick that could save hundreds
You do not need every AI tool every month.
Instead of stacking subscriptions, rotate them.
For example:
- Use an image tool only during a design-heavy month.
- Use a research tool only while working on a specific project.
- Use a writing tool during job applications.
- Use a meeting transcription tool only during a busy client period.
- Cancel immediately after the task is finished.
This turns AI subscriptions into short-term tools rather than permanent bills.
The “one in, one out” rule
Before subscribing to a new paid AI tool, cancel one existing AI tool or write down exactly why you need both.
Use this test:
“This new tool does something my current tool cannot do, and I will use it at least once a week.”
If you cannot honestly say that, do not subscribe yet.
When an AI subscription may be worth it
This is not about cancelling all AI tools.
A paid AI tool may be good value if it:
- helps you earn more money;
- saves several hours each month;
- replaces another subscription;
- helps with job applications;
- supports a side hustle;
- improves your business;
- helps with study or training;
- does something the free version cannot do.
When it probably is not worth it
Be wary if your reason for keeping it is:
- “I might use it one day.”
- “Everyone else seems to have it.”
- “It’s only £20.”
- “I forgot I was paying.”
- “I signed up for a trial and never cancelled.”
- “I don’t know what the free version offers now.”
Set a personal AI budget
Households should treat AI like any other spending category.
| Type of user | Suggested AI budget |
|---|---|
| Occasional user | £0 — use free versions |
| Regular personal user | £10–£25/month |
| Student or jobseeker | One paid tool during high-need periods only |
| Freelancer or side-hustler | £25–£50/month if it clearly supports income |
| Business user | Only if tracked against revenue, time saved or client output |
Reader challenge
Take the 15-minute AI audit today. If you find an unused subscription, cancel it immediately. If you find two tools doing the same job, keep the one you actually use and cancel the other.
Final warning
AI can be brilliant. It can save time, improve work, help with job applications, support side hustles and make life easier.
But it can also become another invisible household bill.
The danger is not one subscription. It is the stack.
£20 here, £13 there, another annual renewal somewhere else — and suddenly AI is costing more than your streaming services, mobile contract or insurance savings combined.
The smartest households will not be the ones with the most AI tools.
They will be the ones paying only for the tools they actually use.
Yes — here’s a paste-ready WordPress HTML calculator block.
AI Subscription Cost Calculator
Enter how much you spend on AI tools each month to see what it costs over a year.
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Calculate
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FAQ
Are AI subscriptions worth paying for?
They can be worth paying for if you use them regularly and they save time, improve your work or help you earn money. If you only use AI occasionally, a free plan may be enough.
How much can AI subscriptions cost per year?
One £20-a-month AI subscription costs around £240 a year. Three similar subscriptions can cost around £720 a year. Add design, writing or productivity tools and the total can approach £1,000.
Which AI subscriptions should I cancel first?
Cancel anything you have not used in 30 days, anything that duplicates another tool, and anything you signed up for during a trial but no longer need.
Should I pay annually for AI tools?
Only pay annually if you are certain you will use the tool all year. Annual billing can be cheaper, but it can also lock you into something you stop using.
Can free AI tools be enough?
Yes. For casual use, free AI tools may be enough for writing help, brainstorming, summaries and general questions. Paid plans are usually best for heavier or specialist use.


