How to permanently disable auto-renewal so you never get surprised by an unexpected renewal charge again. This guide applies specifically to Grammarly Premium ($12-$30/mo) subscribers in West Virginia, citing applicable state and federal law.
West Virginia doesn't have a specific auto-renewal law, but the CCPA (no specific auto-renewal law) (W. Va. Code § 46A-6-102) and federal consumer protection laws still protect you:
Applied to Grammarly Premium (Grammarly website) in West Virginia
Log into your account settings
Go to the service's website (not app, unless it's an app-store subscription). Navigate to Settings → Billing → Subscription or Plan.
Look for 'Auto-Renewal' or 'Recurring Billing' toggle
Most services have an explicit auto-renewal toggle. Turn it off. You will typically keep access until your current paid period ends, then it won't renew.
Get written confirmation
After toggling, screenshot the settings page and save any confirmation email. If they charge you after disabling auto-renewal, you have documented proof.
For app-store subscriptions, disable in the store
iPhone: Settings → [Your Name] → Subscriptions → [App] → Turn off Renew. Google Play: Manage subscriptions → Cancel. The app itself cannot see these settings.
Set a final billing date reminder
Note when your current period ends. After that date, verify no charge appears. If you see a charge after disabling auto-renewal, that is an unauthorized charge.
Method: Grammarly website · Difficulty: medium
Grammarly Premium-specific tips
No refund after 7 days (monthly) or 7 days (annual).
These apply to Grammarly Premium in every state, including West Virginia:
SubScrub auto-cites 16 CFR Part 425 + sends legally-backed letters