Subpilot tested: skip it, call your ISP
June 28, 2026 · 11:22 AM

Subpilot tested: skip it, call your ISP

This issue gives Subpilot a SKIP verdict for bill negotiation because its pricing is not publicly transparent, its layered fee model can eat small savings, and no independent user-verified bill-negotiation dollar outcomes were found. The action section gives readers a refreshed ISP retention script using current Spectrum, Xfinity, and Frontier outcomes, competitor leverage, exact phrasing, anti-patterns, and a savings calculator.

Subpilot's problem is not that it looks fake. The problem is that the self-call route has better evidence.
This week, Subpilot gets a SKIP verdict for bill negotiation. It is a real Finelo product with app-store presence and a large review footprint, but its public pages do not disclose complete pricing, its fee stack can eat a small win, and the research found no independent user-verified dollar savings from its bill-negotiation feature. The better move is the ISP retention call: current Spectrum, Xfinity, and Frontier users reported cuts ranging from about $20 to $55/month, with the strongest Frontier and Spectrum cases cutting bills by roughly two-thirds. 1 2 3 4
Universal opener: "I'm calling because my internet bill is no longer competitive. I have a real lower offer available, and I want to see whether your retention team can match it before I switch."
Use that sentence only if you have a real alternative. Retention departments negotiate when they believe the account may leave.

Part 1: Subpilot — SKIP for bill negotiation

What Subpilot actually does

Subpilot is a subscription-management and cancellation app from Finelo. Its public site describes tools for finding subscriptions, canceling unwanted services, monitoring renewals, and negotiating bills, but the public Subpilot about page does not list complete pricing. 1 SubBuddy's 2026 comparison reached the same practical problem: a shopper cannot cleanly verify Subpilot's public pricing before signup the way they can with Rocket Money. 2
The reconstructed fee structure has three layers: a monthly subscription, a 40% fee on first-year negotiated savings, and a possible $4.99 charge per vendor for extra cancellation work. The research found monthly price references ranging from $6.93/month to $30/month, plus a $69.99/year reference in a JustAnswer pricing thread, which means the exact price may depend on channel, timing, or checkout flow. 5 6
That matters because bill negotiation is not like canceling one forgotten subscription. If Subpilot saves you $25/month, the first-year savings are $300. A 40% success fee takes $120, and even the low-end monthly subscription estimate adds roughly $83/year, leaving about $97 before any extra vendor charges. 2 At $50/month in savings, the first-year savings are $600, the 40% fee is $240, and the low-end monthly subscription estimate brings total first-year cost to about $323. 2

The legitimacy test is not the same as the savings test

Subpilot clears the basic "is this a real product?" bar. The research found an official website, App Store and Google Play listings, the Finelo parent-brand connection, and Trustpilot search snippets showing roughly 6,295 reviews with an average around 4 stars. 7 8 9 Two LinkedIn reviews published in May 2026 were broadly positive, while still warning that the first scan can miss subscriptions, privacy tradeoffs are real, and pricing must be checked at checkout. 10 11
The savings test is where Subpilot fails for this channel. The research found no independent public case where a user says Subpilot negotiated an ISP, mobile, cable, streaming, gym, or alarm bill down by a specific dollar amount. A May 2026 LinkedIn reviewer said Subpilot found 19 subscriptions and identified 6 unused services worth $52/month, but that was subscription cancellation, not a verified bill-negotiation outcome. 10
There are also billing-friction complaints. JustAnswer has at least three Subpilot-related complaint threads in which users said they were charged after clicking through an ad or trial flow, with amounts in the $19.99 to $69.99 range, and one thread described charges of $19.99 and $60.81 before the user had used the app. 12 That does not prove the product is a scam. It does make the checkout screen, renewal date, and refund path part of the risk.

Verdict

Skip Subpilot if your goal is lowering an internet bill this week. It may fit one narrow reader: someone with 8 or more subscriptions, comfort connecting email or bank data, and enough cancellation work to justify a subscription manager. For bill negotiation, the evidence is weaker than the fee.
If you still test it, do three things before paying: screenshot the checkout page, write down the renewal date, and confirm whether bill negotiation covers your exact provider. Do not assume "telecom" means your ISP.

Part 2: The refreshed ISP retention call

Why the ISP call is back on the table

The first issue covered an ISP call. This update is not a second bite at the same unchanged bill. It is for readers whose promo expired, whose bill jumped, or whose provider now faces a real local competitor.
The refreshed evidence is stronger than the tool evidence. NerdWallet updated its cable-and-internet negotiation script on May 15, 2026, and its playbook now explicitly tells readers to say "Cancel service" to reach the right department faster, bring real competitor data, ask about a 5-year price guarantee, and hang up and call again if the answer is no. 13 20SomethingFinance updated its Xfinity script on January 15, 2026, with a live-call example that cut a Comcast bill from $130/month to $93/month under a 2-year contract. 14
The community outcomes line up with that script. A Spectrum user reported a drop from $85/month to $30/month for 3 years after saying T-Mobile offered internet for $35/month. 3 An Xfinity user reported 1Gbps for $50/month for 5 years, and another said a termination call produced $40/month for a year. 15 A Frontier Fios user reported 500/500 Mbps dropping from $60/month to $19.99/month for a year, plus a choice between 6 months free or a $300 Visa card after declining two offers. 4

The competitor numbers to have in front of you

Do not call with a vague complaint. Call with a number.
If you have this providerUse this leverage if available at your addressWhy it helps
XfinityAT&T Fiber starts at $55/month standalone, or $35/month when bundled with AT&T wireless under the June 2026 plan structure. 16It gives you a named fiber alternative rather than a generic threat.
XfinityXfinity Now prepaid lists $30/month for 100Mbps and $45/month for 200Mbps. 13It anchors the call against Comcast's own lower-price option.
SpectrumT-Mobile 5G Home Internet is $50/month with AutoPay and a 5-year price guarantee in June 2026 deal listings. 17A Spectrum user used a $35/month T-Mobile offer to get $30/month from Spectrum. 3
Frontier FiosVerizon Fios lists 300/300 Mbps at $49.99/month with a 3-year price lock in June 2026 deal listings. 17It gives fiber-to-fiber comparison, not fiber versus cellular.
Any ISPHighSpeedInternet's June 2026 guide says most households should look for at least 300Mbps and a total cost of $50 or less per month. 17It gives you a simple sanity check for whether the offer is fair.
Check competitor pages while logged out of your current provider account. A Frontier user who later negotiated a drop to $46/month for 3 years said the public homepage showed faster promotional plans at $29.99, while the first phone rep claimed $79.99 was the only available promotion. 18

The five-step ISP script

Step 1: Reach the department with authority

Do not start with billing. Billing can explain the price. Retention can change it.
For Xfinity, call 1-800-934-6489 and say "disconnect service" at the automated prompt. 14 For Spectrum, say "cancel service"; a Spectrum update says the old retention department may be called Customer Solutions, and the automated system may route you there directly. 19 For Frontier, ask for retentions or say you need to process cancellation. 4
If the first person says they can help, use this line:
"I appreciate it, but I need the retention or customer-solutions team because I am deciding whether to keep the account or cancel it today. Can you transfer me there?"

Step 2: Use the opener with a real competitor

Once you reach retention, read this without improving it:
"Hi, I'm calling because my internet bill is no longer competitive. I have [competitor] available at my address for $[price] per month. I would rather stay if the price is close, but I need your best retention rate before I decide."
If you are on Spectrum, the clean version is:
"T-Mobile is offering home internet in my area for $[price] per month. My Spectrum bill is now $[current bill]. Can Customer Solutions match or beat that?"
That phrasing matches the successful Spectrum pattern: the user said T-Mobile offered internet for $35, and Spectrum lowered the bill from $85 to $30. 3
If you are on Xfinity, use:
"AT&T Fiber / Verizon Fios / T-Mobile is available to me at $[price]. I am asking whether Xfinity has a retention rate or 5-year price guarantee that keeps me near that number."
A Reddit commenter in the Xfinity thread put the instruction plainly: "Call Comcast, ask for the retention department. Tell them that you got a lower offer from one of their competitors and ask if they can provide a better rate." 15

Step 3: Ask for the hidden rate and stop talking

When the rep gives the first offer, do not accept it immediately. Say:
"That is closer, but it is still above the alternative. Is there a lower retention rate, a longer price lock, or a customer-solutions promotion you can apply?"
Then stop talking for 30 seconds. Do not fill the silence with explanations.
This is not magic. It prevents you from negotiating against yourself. Frontier's best documented outcome came after the customer told the rep to process cancellation and declined two offers before receiving $19.99/month for 500/500 Mbps. 4 NerdWallet's updated script uses the same logic in softer form: if options are limited, ask for future promotions, other ways to save, or a retention specialist with more flexibility. 13

Step 4: Ask for price lock, fees, and speed in one sentence

A lower headline rate is not enough. Confirm the terms before you say yes:
"Before I accept, can you confirm the monthly price, the speed tier, equipment fees, taxes and fees, the price-lock length, and whether this adds a contract or early-termination fee?"
This sentence protects you from the common downgrade trap. In the Xfinity thread, one user said a chat rep claimed a plan switch would not change upload speed, but the result became 1Gbps/100Mbps; the user wrote, "They will lie to you." 15 If speed matters for work calls, gaming, or uploads, ask for the exact upload and download numbers.
Also ask about equipment. 20SomethingFinance's Xfinity script notes that owning your modem can avoid a $15/month modem rental, or $180/year. 14

Step 5: If the answer is no, hang up and call again

Use this closing line if the offer is still not good enough:
"Thanks for checking. I am not ready to accept that price. I am going to compare the competitor offer and call back before I make the cancellation final."
Then hang up and call again later. A Frontier user reported that the first rep said $79.99 was the only promotion, but a second rep later offered $46/month for 3 years with much faster service and a $20 bill credit. 18 NerdWallet's Reddit-derived advice says the same thing: if you get a no, hang up and call again because the outcome can depend on the agent. 13

Anti-patterns that cost money

Do not use live chat for the final negotiation. 20SomethingFinance says few readers have had luck with Xfinity live chat in recent years, and the Xfinity upload-speed complaint came from chat. 14 15
Do not call without a real alternative. Empty cancellation threats are weaker than a named competitor with a price, speed, and promo term. The Spectrum case that produced $30/month used a specific T-Mobile offer as leverage. 3
Do not accept the first offer. Frontier's $19.99/month result came after two declined offers, and the $46/month Frontier result came after hanging up on a bad first answer. 4 18
Do not trade flexibility for a tiny discount. A long price lock is useful when the rate is genuinely good, like $50/month for 1Gbps for 5 years. 15 A long contract for a small reduction is different. Ask whether the offer creates an early-termination fee before accepting.

Savings calculator

For a reader facing an expired promo or recent ISP price hike, the reasonable target from this week's evidence is $20-$55/month, or $240-$660/year. The low end matches ordinary retention cuts; the high end matches the Spectrum $85 to $30 outcome and sits below the most extreme Frontier examples. 3 4
ActionExpected first-year impactCost
Skip Subpilot for ISP bill negotiationAvoids a subscription plus possible 40% success fee$0
Run the ISP retention script after a price hike or promo expiration$240-$660/year$0
Seven-issue savings stack if this is a new ISP action$1,317-$2,846/year$0
Do not double-count the ISP line if you already used the Issue 1 script on the same unchanged account. Count this week's savings only if your price changed, your promo expired, or you are negotiating a different ISP account.

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