Your EU Rights: Subscription Cancellation Laws You Should Know
The EU's two-click cancellation rule, 14-day cooling-off period, and how to file complaints when companies make cancellation hard.
European consumers have some of the strongest subscription cancellation rights in the world. Here's what you're entitled to — and how to enforce it.
The 14-Day Cooling-Off Period
Under the EU Consumer Rights Directive, you have 14 days to cancel any online purchase without giving a reason. This applies to subscriptions too.
Key points:
- The 14 days start from the date of purchase (not when you first use the service)
- You're entitled to a full refund
- The company must process your refund within 14 days of receiving your cancellation
- This applies even if you've used the service during the cooling-off period
Exception: If you explicitly agreed to start the service immediately and acknowledged losing your right of withdrawal, the cooling-off period may not apply. Many services add this consent into their signup flow.
The Two-Click Rule
The EU Digital Services Act introduced the principle that cancellation should be as easy as subscription. In practice:
- If signing up takes 2 clicks, cancelling should take no more than 2 clicks
- Companies cannot require phone calls for cancellation if signup was online
- The cancel option must be clearly visible, not hidden in nested menus
Auto-Renewal Transparency
EU law requires companies to:
- Clearly disclose that a subscription will auto-renew
- State the renewal price (not just the introductory rate)
- Send a reminder before auto-renewal (timing varies by country)
- Provide easy access to cancel before renewal
Country-Specific Rights
Germany
The Gesetz für faire Verbraucherverträge (Fair Consumer Contracts Act) adds:
- Online cancel buttons must be prominently placed
- Maximum initial contract period of 24 months
- After the initial term, contracts renew monthly (not annually)
France
The Loi Hamon provides:
- Free cancellation of insurance and some service contracts after 1 year
- Companies must inform you of renewal 1 month before
Italy
AGCOM regulations require:
- Clear cancellation procedures for telecommunications
- No penalties for switching providers
How to File a Complaint
If a company makes cancellation unreasonably difficult:
- 1Document everything: Screenshot the cancellation flow, save emails
- 2Contact the company in writing: Email creates a paper trail
- 3File with your national consumer agency:
- Germany: Verbraucherzentrale (vzbv.de)
- France: DGCCRF (economie.gouv.fr)
- Italy: AGCM (agcm.it)
- Spain: AECOSAN
- 1Use the EU ODR platform: ec.europa.eu/odr for cross-border disputes
- 2Report to the European Consumer Centre (ECC-Net) for services based in another EU country
Practical Tips
- Always cancel via the website and save confirmation screenshots
- Send a follow-up email referencing your cancellation and the date
- If charged after cancellation, dispute with your bank (chargeback)
- Know that "please call us to cancel" is often illegal in the EU for online subscriptions
Encuentre sus suscripciones ocultas
Suba su extracto bancario — nuestra IA identifica cada cargo recurrente en 60 segundos. 100 % privado — nada sale de su dispositivo.
Escanear mi extracto — GratisMás del blog
7 Hidden Subscriptions That Are Costing You Money Right Now
The average European spends €487/year on forgotten subscriptions. Here are the sneakiest charges hiding in your bank statement.
Subscription Dark Patterns: How Companies Make Cancellation Hard
From Amazon's 6-click cancellation maze to Adobe's termination fees — a guide to the tricks companies use to keep charging you.
How Europeans Can Save €500+ on Subscriptions in 2026
A practical playbook for auditing, downgrading, and cancelling subscriptions — without losing the services you actually use.