Why we built Finletix
Every subscription tracker on the market asks for the same thing first: your bank login. That always felt backwards. You're trying to find money you're losing — you shouldn't have to hand over your banking credentials to a third party to do it.
The problem
Subscriptions are designed to be easy to start and easy to forget. A free trial converts, a gym membership outlives the New Year's resolution, a streaming bundle quietly raises its price. None of it shows up as one big charge — it's a dozen small ones, scattered across a statement most people never read line by line.
The one rule
Finletix is built around a single constraint: it never asks for a bank login, and it never connects to a bank account. You upload a statement export or a screenshot you choose to share, it's read once to produce your report, and it's not kept. That constraint shaped every other decision in the product — see the full breakdown on the privacy page.
What Finletix is — and isn't
Finletix is a subscription-analytics tool. It reads what you upload and tells you what you're paying for, what looks like waste, and how to cancel it. It is not a bank, not a money-transmission service, and not a registered investment or financial adviser — it doesn't move money, hold funds, or give personalized financial advice. It also doesn't cancel anything on your behalf; it hands you the letter and the steps, and you stay in control of your own accounts.
Get in touch
Questions, feedback, or something looks wrong in a report? Reach us at hello@finletix.com. For anything about your data specifically, see privacy@finletix.com.