Where to Find Apple Subscriptions on Any Device

Managing what you pay for matters — and Apple makes it possible to view, edit, and cancel every subscription tied to your Apple ID from a handful of places. Whether you're on an iPhone, iPad, Mac, or even a Windows PC, the path is slightly different but the destination is the same: a central list of everything billed through Apple.

Here's exactly where to look, what you'll find, and why the experience varies depending on your device and setup.

What "Apple Subscriptions" Actually Means

When Apple refers to subscriptions, it means any recurring billing arrangement managed through your Apple ID. This includes:

  • Apple's own services — Apple TV+, Apple Music, Apple Arcade, iCloud+, Apple News+, Apple Fitness+
  • Third-party app subscriptions — any app you've subscribed to through the App Store (streaming apps, productivity tools, games, etc.)

What it does not include are subscriptions billed directly by a company outside of Apple — for example, if you signed up for Netflix through Netflix's website, that won't appear here. Only subscriptions routed through Apple's in-app purchase system show up in this list.

How to Find Apple Subscriptions on iPhone or iPad 📱

This is the most common route for most users.

  1. Open the Settings app
  2. Tap your name at the top (your Apple ID)
  3. Tap Subscriptions

You'll see two sections: Active subscriptions and Expired ones. Tapping any entry shows billing frequency, renewal date, and options to change or cancel the plan.

Alternatively, you can reach the same screen through the App Store:

  1. Open the App Store
  2. Tap your profile photo in the top-right corner
  3. Tap Manage Subscriptions

Both paths lead to the same list — it's just a matter of which app you're already in.

How to Find Apple Subscriptions on a Mac 🖥️

On a Mac running macOS Monterey or later:

  1. Click the Apple menu (top-left)
  2. Go to System Settings
  3. Click your Apple ID (top of the sidebar)
  4. Select Subscriptions

On older versions of macOS running System Preferences instead:

  1. Click Apple menu → System Preferences
  2. Click Apple ID
  3. Select Media & Purchases, then Manage next to Subscriptions

You can also go through the Mac App Store: open the App Store, click your name in the lower-left sidebar, then click Account Settings and scroll to the Subscriptions section.

How to Find Apple Subscriptions on a Windows PC

If you use Apple devices but primarily work on Windows, you can still access your subscriptions through iTunes (if installed) or the Apple Devices app available through the Microsoft Store.

Via iTunes on Windows:

  1. Open iTunes
  2. Click Account in the menu bar
  3. Select View My Account
  4. Sign in if prompted
  5. Scroll to Settings, then click Manage next to Subscriptions

This gives you the same list you'd see on any Apple device — useful if you're troubleshooting a billing issue from a work machine.

What You Can Do From the Subscriptions Screen

Once you're looking at your subscriptions list, you have several options beyond just viewing:

ActionWhat It Does
Cancel SubscriptionStops renewal at the end of the current billing period
Change PlanSwitches between tiers (e.g., individual to family, monthly to annual)
ResubscribeRestarts an expired subscription
View Billing HistoryShows past charges for that subscription

Canceling doesn't cut access immediately — you keep access until the paid period ends.

Why Your Subscriptions List Might Look Different

The same Apple ID can look slightly different across devices for a few reasons:

  • Family Sharing — If you're part of a Family Sharing group, subscriptions shared with you by the organizer appear separately from your own
  • Apple One — This bundle groups multiple Apple services under a single line item rather than showing them individually
  • Region — Some services and subscription tiers are only available in certain countries, which affects what appears in your list
  • iOS/macOS version — The menu labels and navigation paths shifted when Apple moved from System Preferences to System Settings with macOS Ventura

If a subscription you expect to see isn't showing up, it's worth checking whether it was purchased through a different Apple ID or billed directly by the provider outside of Apple's system.

Subscriptions vs. Purchases: An Important Distinction

The subscriptions screen only shows recurring charges. One-time app purchases, movie rentals, and music purchases don't appear here — those live under your purchase history, which is a separate section accessible through your Apple ID account settings.

If you're auditing your Apple spending, you'll want to check both places. The subscriptions screen tells you what's renewing; the purchase history tells you what you've bought outright.

The Variable That Changes Everything

Finding your subscriptions is straightforward — but what you do once you're there depends entirely on your situation. Someone running Apple One sees a bundled entry where another user sees five separate line items. A family organizer manages subscriptions shared across multiple people, while an individual account is a simpler audit. And anyone who splits services between personal and work Apple IDs will need to check each account separately.

The list is easy to find. What it contains — and what's worth keeping — is a function of how your accounts, devices, and services are actually set up.