Cancel any subscription.
Cite the law they're ignoring.
Generate a free 3-step cancellation email sequence grounded in ROSCA, the Fair Credit Billing Act, and your state's consumer protection statutes. Not a polite request — a documented demand citing the specific law that applies.
Writing assistance grounded in verified law. Not legal advice. Not a law firm.
How It Works
Five minutes to three ready-to-send emails.
Tell us about the subscription
Company name, account ID, what you're being charged, and what happened when you tried to cancel. Takes about 5 minutes.
Get your 3-email sequence
Three escalating emails — each citing the specific federal and state law that applies. Day 0 formal request, Day 7 follow-up, Day 14 final notice with regulatory complaint references.
Copy, send, escalate
Copy each email and send it from your personal email account. If they still haven't cancelled after Email 3, you have the FTC and CFPB filing URLs and credit card dispute guidance.
Sample Output
This is what a generic cancellation email looks like.
And this is what ours looks like.
Most cancellation emails are polite requests that companies file in the trash. Ours cite the specific law they're required to comply with.
I would like to cancel my subscription. Please process this request and confirm the cancellation.
Thank you.”
No statute. No account identifier. No charge revocation. No deadline. No escalation path. Easy to ignore.
I request written confirmation within 7 business days that my subscription has been cancelled, auto-renewal has been disabled, and no further charges will be made.”
Specific statute. Account identified. Charges revoked. Deadline set. Confirmation demanded. Two more emails follow if ignored.
The Sequence
Three emails. Escalating pressure. All free.
Each email builds on the last. If the company ignores your first request, the follow-ups name regulatory agencies and credit card dispute rights. The cost of ignoring you goes up with each step.
Formal Cancellation Demand
Cites ROSCA and your state's auto-renewal law. Revokes payment authorization. Requests written confirmation within 7 business days.
Follow-Up with Escalation
References your first email by date. Names the specific regulatory agency. Mentions Fair Credit Billing Act chargeback rights.
Final Notice
Provides FTC and CFPB complaint filing URLs. States that all post-cancellation charges will be disputed with credit card issuer. Final deadline.
Full Preview
Here's what Email 1 looks like.
Subject:
Formal Request to Cancel Subscription — [Account ID]
Dear [Company Name], I am writing to formally request the immediate cancellation of my subscription (Account: [Account ID]). Under the Restore Online Shoppers' Confidence Act (ROSCA), 16 CFR Part 425, sellers offering negative option features must provide a simple mechanism for consumers to stop recurring charges. I am exercising that right and revoking authorization for any future charges to my payment method effective immediately. I request written confirmation within 7 business days that: 1. My subscription has been cancelled 2. Auto-renewal has been disabled 3. No further charges will be made to my payment method on file Thank you for your prompt attention to this matter. Sincerely, [Your Name] [Your Email] [Date]
Why This Is Different
Generic templates vs. Resolvaio.
| Generic Templates | Resolvaio | |
|---|---|---|
| What it generates | A single polite "please cancel" email | A 3-step escalation sequence (Day 0, 7, 14) |
| Legal citations | None | ROSCA, FCBA, and state-specific statutes |
| Charge revocation | Not mentioned | Explicit revocation of payment authorization |
| Regulatory escalation | Not included | FTC and CFPB complaint references with filing URLs |
| Chargeback rights | Not mentioned | Fair Credit Billing Act dispute rights cited |
| Personalization | Fill in the blanks | Pre-filled with your account, company, and situation details |
| Cost | Free | Free |
Industries Covered
Works for gyms, telecom, SaaS, streaming, and mobile apps.
Each industry has its own cancellation barriers. Our diagnostic identifies the specific barriers you're facing and the emails address them directly.
Gym Memberships
Planet Fitness, LA Fitness, Anytime Fitness, Equinox
Common barrier: Require in-person cancellation, freeze periods, annual commitments
Learn more
Telecom & Cable
Comcast, AT&T, Spectrum, Verizon
Common barrier: Early termination fees, bundled contracts, retention departments
Learn more
SaaS & Software
Adobe, Salesforce, Grammarly, McAfee
Common barrier: Auto-renewal buried in terms, no visible cancel button
Learn more
Streaming Services
Netflix, Hulu, Spotify, YouTube Premium
Common barrier: Auto-renewed without clear notice, difficult refund process
Learn more
Mobile App Subscriptions
Dating apps, fitness trackers, cloud storage, news paywalls
Common barrier: Charged through App Store/Play Store, confusing unsubscribe process
Learn more
Federal baseline (ROSCA) covers all 50 states. State-specific citations included for California (ARL), New York (GBL § 527-a), and others where available.
Legal Basis
Every citation verified. Never invented.
ROSCA
The Restore Online Shoppers' Confidence Act and the FTC Negative Option Rule (16 CFR Part 425) require sellers to provide simple cancellation mechanisms and clear disclosure of recurring charges.
Fair Credit Billing Act
The FCBA provides consumers with chargeback rights for unauthorized charges, including charges made after a cancellation request. Disputes must be filed within 60 days of the billing statement.
State Auto-Renewal Laws
California's ARL (AB 2863), New York's GBL § 527-a, and similar state statutes impose additional requirements on auto-renewal disclosures and cancellation rights. We include state-specific citations where available.
This is general information about these statutes, not legal advice. Verify current law with official sources.
FAQ
Common questions
Is this really free?
Yes. Subscription cancellation is free with no card required. We generate all three emails at no cost. Our revenue comes from a separate paid product for security deposit recovery — subscription cancellation is free because it helps people and builds trust.
Do you send the emails for me?
No. We generate the emails and you send them from your own email account. This is better for you — emails from your personal address are more credible to companies than emails from a third-party service. We provide a copy button and an "Open in email" button that pre-fills your email client.
What law does it cite?
Federally, the emails cite the Restore Online Shoppers’ Confidence Act (ROSCA) and the FTC Negative Option Rule, which require companies to provide simple cancellation mechanisms. For chargeback rights, we cite the Fair Credit Billing Act (FCBA). In states with specific auto-renewal laws (like California’s ARL or New York’s GBL § 527-a), we include those too.
Will this work for my specific company?
The emails are grounded in federal consumer protection law that applies to all subscription services in the US. We customize them for your specific company, account details, and situation. Most companies process clearly stated cancellation requests that cite applicable law, but some resist — that is what the follow-up and escalation emails are for.
Is this legal advice?
No. Resolvaio is a writing assistance tool. It generates emails based on generally applicable consumer protection statutes. It does not evaluate your specific claim, predict outcomes, or recommend a course of action. Review all content before sending.
Why three emails?
One email is easy to ignore. The 3-step sequence escalates: Email 1 is a formal request citing the law. Email 2 follows up after 7 days and names the regulatory agency you can complain to. Email 3 is a final notice referencing FTC and CFPB complaint processes plus credit card dispute rights. Each step increases the cost of ignoring you.
What if I’ve already tried to cancel?
Even better. The diagnostic asks about your previous cancellation attempts — when, how, and what happened. The generated emails reference your prior attempt by date and method, which strengthens the request and establishes a pattern of the company making cancellation difficult.
What happens after I send all three emails?
If the company still hasn’t cancelled, the third email provides specific URLs to file complaints with the FTC (ftc.gov/complaint) and CFPB (consumerfinance.gov/complaint). You can also dispute post-cancellation charges with your credit card issuer under the Fair Credit Billing Act.
Stop asking nicely.
Cite the law.
Companies count on you giving up. A polite request gets ignored. A documented demand citing federal consumer protection law gets a response. The tool is free. The emails take 5 minutes.
Generate Your Free EmailsNo card required. No signup fee. Takes about 5 minutes.
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