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Cancel The Economist: The Right Way

How to cancel the economist in nigeria and recover what you're owed

What the economist is and why nigerians subscribe

The Economist is a weekly international publication covering politics, economics, technology, and culture. It reaches millions globally, including thousands of Nigerian readers who value its in-depth analysis and business insights. You can access it as a digital subscription, a print edition, or both combined.

The service sells subscriptions directly through its website (economist.com), via The Economist mobile app, or through Apple App Store and Google Play. Each purchase channel operates under different billing and cancellation rules, which is why understanding your specific subscription path matters before you cancel.

Who uses the economist in nigeria

Professionals, students, and business leaders in Nigeria use The Economist to stay informed on global markets, policy shifts, and emerging trends. The digital access allows you to read on phone, tablet, or computer, making it flexible for busy schedules. Annual subscriptions cost significantly less per month than monthly plans, but locking in a year-long commitment also means you must navigate cancellation carefully if your situation changes.

Subscription formats available to nigerian readers

You can subscribe monthly or annually. The Economist also offers print-only, digital-only, and print-plus-digital bundles depending on your preference and where you purchase. Pricing varies by platform and currency, so a subscription bought on the App Store costs differently from one purchased directly on economist.com.

Your consumer rights in nigeria under the federal competition and consumer protection act

Nigeria's Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Act (2018) protects you as a consumer when you buy services, including digital subscriptions. Understanding these rights strengthens your position if The Economist refuses a fair cancellation or refund request.

What the FCCPA guarantees you

The Act requires businesses to deal fairly and honestly with consumers. You have the right to clear information about what you buy, fair contract terms, and a remedy if the service fails to meet what was promised. If The Economist's billing is unclear, charges you without consent, or prevents cancellation through deliberate obstruction, you can escalate your complaint to the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC).

Unlike UK or EU customers, Nigerian subscribers do not benefit from a statutory 14-day cooling-off period that allows full refunds. However, if you cancel within days of purchasing and have not consumed the service meaningfully, you may negotiate a pro-rata refund by appealing to The Economist's goodwill or by filing a complaint with the FCCPC if the company behaves unfairly.

How to involve the FCCPC if the economist refuses to help

If The Economist blocks your cancellation request, ignores your messages, or charges you after you cancel, contact the FCCPC. You can file a complaint online at www.fccpc.gov.ng or visit their office in Lagos. Document everything: your subscription purchase date, cancellation request, and all communication with The Economist's customer service. The FCCPC takes swift action against companies that breach consumer protection rules, and involving them often motivates faster resolution.

Pricing for the economist subscriptions in nigeria

Below is a summary of pricing available to Nigerian subscribers, sourced from App Store listings in Nigerian Naira.

Plan Price (NGN) Billing cycle Cancellation policy
Digital monthly (iOS) ₦8,500 Monthly Cancel before renewal; no mid-term refund
Digital annual (iOS) ₦599,000 Annual Cancel before renewal; no mid-term refund
Digital monthly (website) Varies Monthly Cancel via live chat; pro-rata refunds rare
Digital annual (website) Varies Annual Cancel via support; policy depends on Terms version
Print + digital Varies Monthly or annual Cancellation depends on purchase channel

Prices on the website differ from App Store prices and fluctuate with exchange rates and promotional offers. Before you cancel, check your latest invoice to confirm the exact amount you were charged and the renewal date.

Why you should cancel the economist and when not to

Canceling makes sense if you no longer read the publication, feel priced out, prefer free news sources, or need to cut costs. It also makes sense if you subscribed by accident, cannot access your account, or were auto-renewed without your consent.

Valid reasons to cancel

  • The subscription is too expensive for your current budget.
  • You have switched to free news apps or websites for business updates.
  • You subscribed on impulse and rarely open the app.
  • You were charged without authorizing the renewal.
  • The service quality or content no longer matches what you paid for.
  • You bought a duplicate subscription by mistake.

When you might pause instead of cancel

If you love The Economist but need a temporary break, some subscription services allow you to pause rather than cancel outright. Contact The Economist's support team to ask if pausing is an option. This preserves your account, preferences, and reading history while stopping charges for a set period (usually 30 to 90 days).

How to cancel the economist in nigeria: step by step

Your cancellation process depends entirely on where you subscribed. The method differs if you bought directly from The Economist, via the app, or through Apple or Google.

If you subscribed directly on economist.com or the app

Direct subscriptions require you to contact customer support manually; there is no self-service cancel button visible on the website or app. Stopee recommends reaching out early, before your renewal date, to avoid being charged for another term.

  1. Go to economist.com and locate the "Help" or "Contact us" link, usually at the bottom of the page.
    • Look for "Manage your subscription" or "Billing support."
  2. Select "Live chat" or "Email support" and choose your reason as "Cancel my subscription."
    • Live chat is faster; expect a response within 5 to 15 minutes during business hours.
  3. Provide your account email and the email address or phone number linked to your subscription.
    • The agent will ask for your order or subscription reference number; find this on your latest invoice.
  4. Clearly state your cancellation date and ask the agent to confirm it in writing.
    • Pro tip: Request the agent send you a cancellation confirmation email immediately; save it for your records.
  5. Verify that no future charges appear on your card within 7 days of the cancellation date.
    • If you are charged after cancellation, dispute it with your bank or card issuer immediately and reference your cancellation email.

If you subscribed via apple app store

Apple processes all cancellations and refunds for App Store subscriptions, not The Economist. You must manage this through your Apple ID settings, not through The Economist's website or app.

  1. Open the App Store on your iPhone, iPad, or Mac.
    • On iPhone: tap your profile icon in the top-right corner.
    • On Mac: open the App Store app and click your name in the bottom-left sidebar.
  2. Tap or click "Subscriptions."
    • All your active subscriptions will appear here.
  3. Find "The Economist" and tap it.
    • You will see your subscription plan, next renewal date, and pricing.
  4. Tap "Cancel subscription" or "Edit."
    • Confirm your cancellation in the popup that appears.
  5. Save the cancellation confirmation screen and check your email for an Apple receipt confirming the cancellation.
    • Pro tip: Apple sends a final invoice before your subscription ends; if you receive one after cancellation, contact Apple Support immediately.

If you subscribed via google play

Google Play handles cancellations for subscriptions purchased through Android devices, not The Economist. Follow Google's process to avoid missed deadlines.

  1. Open Google Play on your Android phone or tablet.
    • Tap the profile icon in the top-right corner.
  2. Select "Payments and subscriptions" or "Manage subscriptions" (wording varies by device).
    • This takes you to a list of all your active subscriptions.
  3. Tap "The Economist" from your active subscriptions.
    • Your plan details, renewal date, and price display here.
  4. Tap "Cancel subscription."
    • Google will ask why you are canceling; you can skip this or provide feedback.
  5. Confirm cancellation by tapping "Yes" or "Cancel subscription" again.
    • You will receive an email confirmation from Google Play within minutes.

Warning: If you cancel via Google Play or Apple App Store but The Economist continues charging you on a separate direct subscription, you must cancel the direct subscription separately by contacting The Economist's support team.

What happens after you cancel the economist

Canceling stops future charges, but your access and account depend on when you canceled relative to your renewal date.

Your access after cancellation

If you cancel before your renewal date, you can typically keep reading until the end of your current paid term. For example, if your next renewal is March 15 and you cancel on March 1, you retain access until March 14. Once March 15 arrives without a renewal, your access closes and you can no longer log in.

Some direct subscriptions end access immediately upon cancellation; check your cancellation confirmation email to see whether you retain access for the remainder of your term.

Your account and data

The Economist stores your account, reading preferences, saved articles, and subscription history linked to your email address. If you resubscribe later, these details may be preserved, depending on The Economist's data retention policies. You can request a copy of your data or ask The Economist to delete it by contacting their support team or privacy officer, though deletion may prevent you from easily resubscribing later.

Refunds: what you can realistically expect

Nigeria does not qualify for the 14-day statutory cooling-off period that UK and EU customers enjoy. However, refunds remain possible under specific circumstances.

Refunds for direct subscriptions (economist.com)

The Economist typically does not refund unused subscription periods. However, pro-rata partial refunds are sometimes offered if you cancel very early in your term, depending on The Economist's Terms of Use at the time you subscribed. The policy version matters; check your confirmation email to see which Terms applied to your purchase.

Request a refund by contacting The Economist's support team and explaining your situation. If you canceled within 3 to 5 days of purchase and have not heavily used the service, mention this to maximize your chances. Stopee recommends asking politely but clearly for a pro-rata refund rather than no refund at all.

Refunds for app store and google play subscriptions

Apple App Store and Google Play each have their own refund windows. Apple typically allows refund requests within 14 days of purchase; Google Play offers 48 hours. To request a refund:

  • On Apple App Store: tap your profile, go to "Purchase history," find The Economist, tap "Report a problem," and request a refund with a brief explanation.
  • On Google Play: open your order history, find The Economist, tap the order, and select "Request refund." You must do this within 48 hours of the charge.

Warning: As of April 14, 2025, The Economist changed its policy so new and renewing subscriptions are non-refundable mid-term. You can cancel before your renewal date to prevent future charges, but you cannot get back money for time already used. This applies globally, including in Nigeria.

Escalation if the economist refuses a fair refund

If The Economist refuses a refund you believe is fair under Nigerian consumer law, file a complaint with the FCCPC. Present evidence that you canceled early, did not meaningfully use the service, or were charged without authorization. The FCCPC can compel refunds if they find the company acted unfairly.

Common mistakes when canceling and how to avoid them

Many people cancel The Economist but then face surprise charges or confusion about their access. These mistakes are avoidable with the right steps.

Mistake 1: canceling on the wrong platform

If you subscribed via Apple App Store but contact The Economist directly to cancel, your subscription does not end. The Economist cannot cancel App Store subscriptions; only Apple can. You must cancel through Apple's settings, not through The Economist. Similarly, if you subscribed directly on economist.com, canceling through Google Play does nothing.

Pro tip: Check your latest invoice or email confirmation to confirm where you bought your subscription. The subject line or sender email reveals the truth: economist.com invoice, Apple receipt, or Google Play receipt.

Mistake 2: not canceling before the renewal date

Cancellation requests submitted after your renewal date do not stop the charge. You will be billed for another term and then canceled. Always cancel 3 to 7 days before your renewal date. Set a phone reminder when you subscribe so you never forget the deadline.

Mistake 3: assuming cancellation is instant

Cancellation takes time to process, especially if you use live chat or email. The Economist may take 1 to 3 business days to confirm your cancellation and prevent the next renewal charge. Do not assume you are canceled until you receive written confirmation.

Mistake 4: not saving your cancellation confirmation

If a charge appears after cancellation, you will need proof that you canceled. Save your cancellation email, chat transcript, or confirmation number. Without it, disputing the charge with your bank becomes harder.

Mistake 5: forgetting to cancel the renewal on direct subscriptions

Direct subscriptions sometimes renew automatically even after you delete the app. You must explicitly ask The Economist's support team to cancel the renewal, not just uninstall the app.

Checklist before and after canceling the economist

Use this checklist to ensure you cancel cleanly and protect yourself from unexpected charges.

Step Action When
1 Find your latest Economist invoice or receipt and note the renewal date. Now
2 Identify where you subscribed (economist.com, Apple App Store, or Google Play). Now
3 Initiate cancellation via the correct platform 5 to 7 days before renewal. Before renewal
4 Request a cancellation confirmation email and save it. During cancellation
5 Check your email and account settings to confirm cancellation within 24 hours. After request
6 Verify no charge appears 7 days after your intended renewal date. After renewal date passes

How stopee helps you cancel subscriptions in nigeria

Stopping unwanted subscriptions can feel overwhelming, especially when companies make cancellation deliberately hard. Stopee is a consumer-led platform that helps you understand your rights, navigate complex cancellation processes, and recover money owed to you. Stopee has helped thousands of consumers cancel The Economist and dozens of other services in Nigeria by providing step-by-step guidance, documenting evidence, and escalating complaints to regulatory bodies when companies refuse to cooperate fairly.

When you visit Stopee, you access real cancellation procedures, consumer law references, and direct contact information for the companies you want to quit. Stopee also tracks patterns: if multiple users report that a company refuses cancellations, Stopee flags it and helps you escalate to the FCCPC or your bank. Whether you need help canceling The Economist or any other service, Stopee empowers you to act with confidence and protect your money.

Contact information for the economist cancellations

Below is the primary contact route for cancellation requests from Nigerian subscribers.

The economist customer support

  • Live chat: economist.com/help (select "Manage my subscription" or "Billing")
  • Email: support@economist.com (response within 24 to 48 hours)
  • Phone: Contact via live chat or email for phone support escalation
  • Headquarters address: The Economist, 750 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017, USA (for postal complaints if email and chat fail)

If the economist does not respond

If The Economist ignores your cancellation request or refuses to cancel after 7 days, escalate to the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC):

  • Website: www.fccpc.gov.ng
  • Email: complaint@fccpc.gov.ng
  • Office: FCCPC, Plot 402A, Cadastral Zone A0, Central Business District, Abuja, Nigeria

In summary, canceling The Economist in Nigeria is straightforward if you follow the right channel for your subscription type, cancel before your renewal date, and save your confirmation. Stopee supports your right to cancel fairly and recover refunds you deserve. Use this guide as your roadmap, contact The Economist's support team with confidence, and remember: you control your money and your subscriptions.

FAQ

The Economist is a weekly international news and business publication that covers politics, economics, technology, and culture, available in print and digital formats.

If you subscribed via the app, you need to cancel through the Apple App Store or Google Play's subscription management, as The Economist does not handle these cancellations.

Generally, The Economist does not provide refunds for the period before cancellation, but some pro-rata refunds may be available depending on the timing of your cancellation.

If you cancel before the renewal date, your subscription will continue until the end of the current paid term, but access may not end immediately.

To cancel your subscription directly via economist.com or the app, you must contact customer service through live chat or phone, providing your account email and order details.

This letter is also available in other countries