Switched From Monthly to Annual — Why Was I Charged So Much?

You were paying monthly.

You switched to an annual plan expecting savings.

Then a large charge hit your account.

This usually happens because annual plans are billed upfront — not converted gradually.


Why The Charge Feels Higher Than Expected

  • Annual plans require full upfront payment
  • Monthly billing does not “roll into” yearly billing
  • Unused monthly time may be recalculated separately
  • Taxes are applied to the full annual amount at once

The system doesn’t multiply your current month — it switches you to a new billing structure.


Monthly vs Annual — What Actually Changes

  • Monthly: Smaller recurring payments
  • Annual: One-time larger charge for 12 months
  • Renewal cycle resets immediately
  • Billing anchor shifts to conversion date

When you switch mid-cycle, billing logic recalculates everything.


Why Savings Don’t Appear Immediately

Annual discounts are based on total cost over time.

  • You save across 12 months
  • But pay the full year upfront
  • Any credit from monthly plan is applied separately

The savings show in long-term value — not in the first charge.


How To Review The Charge Breakdown

  • Check proration credits from your monthly plan
  • Review annual plan base price
  • Confirm renewal date reset
  • Look for tax adjustments on full-year billing

Switching to annual changes the payment structure — not just the price per month.