Cancel The Economist in a few minutes. Below is the direct path to the official The Economist cancellation page and the exact steps so you actually stop being charged.
Open The Economist's cancellation page →
Opens on The Economist's own site — Subsilo doesn't process any cancellation.
The Economist subscription service
Subsilo tracks every subscription you have (including The Economist) and alerts you days before each renewal — so you cancel on time, not after the charge.
Get Subsilo (free) →Sign in to your The Economist account, open Account or Billing, find the Manage subscription or Cancel option, and confirm. The Economist's direct cancellation page is at https://myaccount.economist.com/. Subsilo can remind you days before each The Economist renewal so cancellations never slip past the billing date.
Yes. The Economist subscriptions can be cancelled at any time. You'll typically keep access until the end of the current billing period and won't be charged again after that, provided you cancel before the renewal date.
The Economist generally doesn't offer prorated refunds for unused time. To avoid the next charge, cancel before your renewal date — tracking that date with Subsilo is the easiest way.
The Economist usually keeps your account in a paused or read-only state for a grace period (commonly 30–90 days) before any deletion. Check The Economist's help center for the exact retention window for your plan.
Cancel before your renewal date and save the confirmation email. The safest setup: use Subsilo to log The Economist's renewal date and get a reminder 1–7 days in advance.