3 proven methods to uncover every recurring charge across all your accounts — including forgotten trials and zombie subscriptions. This guide applies specifically to Pluto TV (Free (ad-supported)/mo) subscribers in District of Columbia, citing applicable state and federal law.
District of Columbia's CPPA + Auto-Renewal Protections (D.C. Code § 28-3901) gives you specific protections when dealing with Pluto TV subscriptions:
Penalties: CPPA violation — treble damages and attorney fees
Applied to Pluto TV (N/A — free service) in District of Columbia
Download 3 months of bank and card statements
Get PDF or CSV statements from every bank account and credit card. Most banks let you download from online banking. Go back at least 90 days to catch quarterly billing cycles.
District of Columbia note: D.C. Code § 28-3901 requires Pluto TV to provide an easy cancellation mechanism.
Search for recurring amounts
Highlight every charge that appears at the same dollar amount each month. Patterns: $9.99, $14.99, $19.99, $49.99. Annual charges show up once — look back 13 months to catch them.
Check app store subscriptions
iPhone: Settings → [Your Name] → Subscriptions. Android: Play Store → Payments & subscriptions. These are managed separately and often forgotten.
Search email for billing receipts
Search Gmail or Outlook for 'receipt', 'subscription', 'renewal', 'billing', 'your plan'. Filter by the last 12 months. This catches services billed via PayPal or gift cards.
Check PayPal and Venmo recurring payments
Log into PayPal → Settings → Payments → Manage automatic payments. Venmo: Settings → Payment methods. Many users have 2–5 forgotten subscriptions here.
Method: N/A — free service · Difficulty: easy
Pluto TV-specific tips
N/A — free service.
Under D.C. Code § 28-3901, you may be entitled to a full refund if Pluto TV didn't properly disclose auto-renewal terms at signup.
These apply to Pluto TV in every state, including District of Columbia:
SubScrub auto-cites D.C. Code § 28-3901 + sends legally-backed letters