You own less, but you pay more. In "The Subscription Trap," financial analyst Monica Hall exposes the economic shift that is slowly bleeding the middle class dry: the move from ownership to usership. From streaming services and software to heated car seats and meal kits, companies have realized that recurring revenue is better than a one-time sale. Hall analyzes the psychology of "frictionless spending." She explains how small monthly fees bypass our brain's pain centers associated with paying, leading to "subscription fatigue" and zombie accounts that run for years unnoticed. The book reveals the dark patterns used to make cancellation difficult and the data showing that the average consumer underestimates their monthly subscription spend by 200%. But "The Subscription Trap" is also a guide to reclaiming financial autonomy. Hall suggests a "Subscription Audit," advocates for the "Buy Once, Cry Once" philosophy of quality ownership, and teaches readers how to calculate the true long-term cost of a $9.99/month commitment. It is a necessary defense manual for the era of "Everything as a Service."