CentryAI Reads Your Inbox and Finds Every Subscription You’ve Forgotten About — No Bank Linking, No Manual Entry, a “Zombie Subscription” Score, and a One-Tap Cancel Finder

I was today days old when I learned there’s a free tool that finds every subscription you’ve forgotten about by just reading your inbox — no bank linking, no manual entry, no spreadsheet you swore you’d keep updated. Every subscription tracker I’d seen before this one has the same fatal flaw: it only works if you remember what you’re paying for in the first place, which is exactly the thing you’ve lost track of by the time you go looking for a tool like this.

CentryAI homepage reading Stop paying for subscriptions you've forgotten about, with app screenshots showing a Netflix subscription card and a Zombie risk activity score

CentryAI’s homepage — scans your inbox, flags the subscriptions you’ve stopped using, and scores your “zombie risk.”

How CentryAI Actually Works

CentryAI connects to your Gmail or iCloud inbox and automatically detects every recurring subscription and charge sitting in your email receipts and renewal notices — no manual entry, and critically, no bank account linking. It reads the confirmation and billing emails that are already there, rather than asking you to hunt down every charge yourself or hand over banking credentials to another third-party app. It also states it never stores your emails. Source: Product Hunt, CentryAI.

The Zombie Score and the One-Tap Cancel Finder

Once it has your subscriptions mapped, CentryAI scores each one for how likely you are to have actually abandoned it — flagging anything with no detected activity for 30+ days as a “zombie” subscription. That’s the pattern behind almost every wasted subscription: not that you meant to keep paying, but that nobody ever told you to stop. Once it flags one, the built-in Cancel Finder locates the actual cancellation page for that specific service and gets you there in one tap, instead of you digging through a settings menu that was clearly designed to make cancelling as annoying as possible. Round that out with renewal reminders before you get charged again, multi-currency support, and coverage in 18 languages. Source: Product Hunt, CentryAI.

The Real Reason This Exists

The part of this that actually got me, though, is the origin story. Creator Emre Yilmaz built CentryAI after realizing he has ADHD — and that as a direct result, he was paying for 11 subscriptions he hadn’t used in months. Every subscription tracker on the market before this one requires you to manually enter what you’re paying for. That works fine if remembering is the easy part. It doesn’t work at all if forgetting is the actual problem you have, which is precisely the case for anyone whose brain drops recurring, invisible costs the moment they stop being top-of-mind. Building a tracker that reads your inbox instead of asking you to remember isn’t just a UX choice here — it’s the whole reason the product exists. Source: Product Hunt, CentryAI (maker comment).

Free vs. Paid

The free plan tracks up to 3 subscriptions with the full automatic-scanning feature set turned on — no crippled trial, just a cap on how many subscriptions it’ll watch. If you’ve got more than three recurring charges (and, statistically, you probably do), the paid tier is $7.99/month and removes the cap entirely for unlimited tracking. Worth being upfront about that limit going in, since three subscriptions is a low bar for most households. Source: CentryAI, Free Subscription Tracker.

CentryAI launched on Product Hunt around July 4, 2026 and had a strong debut, ranking #4 among that day’s launches with 229 upvotes. If the pitch resonates — and if you’ve ever opened your bank statement and thought “wait, what is this charge” — it’s worth pointing your inbox at it and seeing what it finds. Sources: Product Hunt Daily Leaderboard, July 4, 2026 and Product Hunt, CentryAI.

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