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What you don't know !
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84%
of people lose money every month on unused services
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60%
of users feel lost facing cancellation terms
Budget Illusion
82%
of consumers underestimate the cost of their automatic withdrawals
Fear of Commitment
44%
of subscribers have experienced a 'commercial trap' experience
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Cancel Overleaf: The Right Way
How to cancel overleaf and stop paying for premium features
Why you might want to cancel overleaf
Overleaf is a powerful cloud-based platform for writing, collaborating on and publishing scientific documents-but it's not the right fit for everyone, and that's okay. You may have finished your thesis, switched to a different writing tool, or simply decided the monthly cost no longer matches your needs. Whatever your reason, cancelling your Overleaf subscription is straightforward when you know the process, and Stopee is here to guide you through every step.
Common reasons to cancel
Many Canadian users cancel Overleaf after completing their academic work, moving to institutional licensing through their university, or discovering alternative LaTeX editors that suit their workflow better. Others find the free tier sufficient for their projects, or they've consolidated their tools and no longer need a dedicated collaboration platform. If you're paying for premium features you rarely use, or if you prefer offline editing, cancellation makes financial sense.
When cancellation makes sense
You should consider cancelling if your current plan's features-private projects, advanced compile time, or team collaboration tools-no longer serve your projects. Overleaf's pricing tiers range from free to institutional licenses, so downgrades are also an option if you want to keep your account but reduce costs. Stopee recommends reviewing your actual usage before cancelling; you may find a cheaper tier better than walking away entirely.