1. Your cell phone bills
As we’ve previously discussed, putting your bills on autopay is a smart option when your bill doesn’t differ from one month to the next and when the plan you have is unlimited for everything. However, if the plan you signed up for isn’t an unlimited one and you end up using more Internet data, for instance, that might mean extra money to pay.
If you don’t keep track of your expenses, you won’t know how much you actually had to pay, and maybe you’ll check your bank account and notice that you’ve spent more than you planned to.
Moreover, if you do want to put your cell phone bill on autopay, you should always check your bill and the amount you have to pay, so you can detect potential billing errors and take care of them before you make the payment.
3 thoughts on “7 Bills You Should NEVER Put on Autopay”
Actually, I find it more advantageous to keep all of my accounts off autopsy. It makes my life more carefree.
I have nothing on auto pay after someone used my account for nearly $1000, after speaking to my bank as to how to assure this would never happen again, first thing they said was did I have anything set up for auto pay (we had 2) they said cancel it, even if I knew who I set the account up with did I realize how other eyes see my information, cancelled them both that day.
Unfortunately the choice to NOT put your streaming services on autopay is not how many give you that choice.