What began as a personal design exploration quickly evolved into something more intentional.
The idea came from a simple observation: most people track their subscriptions in notes apps, spreadsheets, or even mental lists — an approach that’s prone to mistakes, forgotten renewals, and unnecessary charges. I wanted to create something smarter, calmer, and more visual.
From that, Nextsub was born.
Purpose & Vision
Nextsub is designed to help users:
→ Stay productive by keeping subscription management simple and organized.
→ Avoid unnecessary charges by tracking renewal dates and reminding users before billing.
→ Gain visibility into where their money is going — with insights and analytics to spot waste.
Core Experience
I designed over 24 screens covering the full platform experience, including:
Hero & Landing Pages – Clear value proposition for first-time visitors.
Onboarding Flow – Frictionless setup to connect and start tracking subscriptions.
Dashboard – A clean, visual overview of active subscriptions, costs, and upcoming renewals.
Subscription Management – Edit, categorize, and monitor individual subscriptions without clutter.
Notifications & Reminders – Alerts before renewals to prevent surprise charges.
Profile & Settings – User preferences for billing cycles, currencies, and alerts.
Why It Matters
In a world where subscription fatigue is real, many users lose track of recurring payments across streaming services, SaaS tools, memberships, and more. The result? Wasted money and reduced productivity.
Nextsub solves this with:
Clear visibility into all active subscriptions.
Timely reminders to take action before renewals.
Data insights to identify unused or overlapping services.
From Concept to Reality
Somewhere along the way, the project felt too real to remain just a design exercise — so I secured the domain: nextsub.co.
What started as an exploration in UX/UI design became a foundational step toward a real product. This is just the beginning — more features and refinements are on the way.
This project reflects how a simple pain point can spark a design process that blends usability, visual clarity, and business potential — turning an idea into a viable product direction.