WORKFLOW

AI Tool Stack Audit Workflow

A 30-minute workflow for auditing every AI subscription you pay for, spotting redundant spend, and deciding what to keep, downgrade, or cancel.

Objective

Most people and teams accumulate AI subscriptions the way they accumulate SaaS tools generally — one at a time, for one reason at a time, without ever stepping back to check for overlap. This workflow walks through a 30-minute audit that identifies redundant subscriptions, underused plans, and cheaper alternatives, so you keep only what’s actually earning its monthly cost.

Who this is for

Business owners and team leads paying for more than one AI subscription per person, or anyone who suspects they’re paying for capability they don’t use. If you only have one $20/month plan, this audit will take about five minutes and mostly confirm you’re fine.

Prerequisites

  • Access to your billing statements or a card statement covering the last 2 months
  • Login access to each AI tool’s account/usage dashboard
  • 15-30 minutes of uninterrupted time

Tools used

The workflow

Step 1 — List every active AI subscription

Pull two months of statements and list every recurring AI charge: personal subscriptions, team seats, API billing, and any bundled AI add-ons (e.g. Google Workspace or Microsoft 365 add-ons). It’s easy to forget a $10-20/month tool billed annually.

Step 2 — Check actual usage, not intended usage

Open each tool’s usage dashboard. Note whether you’re regularly near the plan’s usage limit, well under it, or barely touching the account at all. A subscription used twice a month is a candidate for downgrade or cancellation regardless of how useful it felt at signup.

Step 3 — Map overlap

For each subscription, write down the one or two tasks it’s actually used for. If two subscriptions cover the same task, that’s redundant spend — pick the one that performs better for that specific task and drop the other, or downgrade it to a free tier.

Step 4 — Run the ROI check

For each subscription you’re keeping, run it through the Subscription ROI Calculator using your actual weekly usage. Anything with a weak or negative ROI moves to the “downgrade or cancel” list.

Step 5 — Check for cheaper equivalents

Before cancelling anything outright, check the Subscription Comparison Chart for a lower-priced plan or bundled option (e.g. an existing Google Workspace or Microsoft 365 plan that already includes AI access) that covers the same task.

Step 6 — Decide and document

For every subscription, land on one of: Keep as-is, Downgrade tier, or Cancel. Note the decision and the reason — this becomes your reference the next time a new AI tool pitch lands in your inbox.

Inputs & outputs

InputsOutputs
Billing statements, usage dashboardsA subscription decision log (keep / downgrade / cancel per tool)
Task-to-tool mappingIdentified redundancies and their estimated monthly savings

Automation

Set a recurring calendar reminder every 90 days to re-run this audit — subscription creep happens quietly, and a quarterly cadence catches it before it compounds. Teams can assign this as a standing task to whoever owns the software budget.

Optimization

  • Standardize on one primary subscription per major task category rather than letting each team member choose independently.
  • For teams, negotiate a single Team/Business plan rather than paying for individual seats across different providers — most Team tiers include admin controls individual plans don’t.
  • Revisit this audit immediately after any pricing change announcement from a provider you use.

Downloadable template

Copy this table into a spreadsheet to run your own audit:

ToolMonthly costPrimary taskUsage levelDecision
About the Author ComputerBin

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