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Sophie Roberts

Subscription fatigue is showing up in search data

27th Feb 2026 Uncategorised 2 minutes to read

At Koozai, we keep a close eye on search behaviour because it’s often the earliest signal that people are changing what they buy, cancel, or avoid. One trend that’s becoming hard to ignore is the growing interest in cancelling major subscription and streaming services.

Using Google Trends, we reviewed UK search interest over time for cancellation-related terms across five big services: Amazon Prime, Netflix, Disney+, NOW TV and Sky. Google Trends doesn’t give absolute search volumes, but it does show relative interest (indexed from 0 to 100), which is ideal for spotting shifts in consumer intent.

Searches for cancelling streaming services surge for some platforms

What the Google Trends screenshots show

Two services show consistently high cancellation interest over time: Amazon Prime and Netflix. That’s not necessarily a sign of mass cancellations on its own. Bigger customer bases tend to create more “how do I cancel?” searches simply because more people have the service in the first place.

The more interesting pattern appears with Disney+, NOW TV and Sky, where the trend shows sharp spikes after long periods of relatively stable interest. Search behaviour like this usually suggests intent: people don’t tend to Google “cancel” unless they’re seriously considering it.

Cancel Amazon Prime

Google Trends: UK search interest for “cancel Amazon Prime” (relative index).

Cancel Netflix

Google Trends: UK search interest for “cancel Netflix” (relative index).

Cancel Disney+

Google Trends: UK search interest for “cancel Disney+” (relative index).

Cancel NOW TV

Google Trends: UK search interest for “cancel NOW TV” (relative index).

Cancel Sky

Google Trends: UK search interest for “cancel Sky” (relative index).

The simple takeaway

Streaming isn’t disappearing. What’s changing is the tolerance for “subscription stacking” — paying for multiple services at once and not thinking too hard about it. These search patterns suggest people are becoming more selective about what stays and what goes.

That’s useful for marketers because search data doesn’t just reflect demand; it also reveals friction and value reassessment. Cancellation interest rising can be an early indicator that retention and perceived value are under pressure.

The table below summarises what the Trends screenshots show.

Service Typical interest (2021–2023) Recent peak interest (2025) Trend direction
Amazon Prime High and steady (40–60) High (60–70) Steady, elevated
Netflix High and steady (50–70) High (70–80) Steady, elevated
Disney+ Low to moderate (20–30) Sharp spike (90–100) Rising sharply
NOW TV Low (15–25) Sharp spike (90–100) Rising sharply
Sky Moderate (30–45) Sharp spike (90–100) Rising sharply

What this means for digital and subscription brands

Methodology

We reviewed Google Trends data for the United Kingdom using cancellation-related search terms for Amazon Prime, Netflix, Disney+, NOW TV and Sky. Google Trends reports relative interest on a 0–100 index rather than absolute search volumes, which makes it useful for identifying changes in intent over time.

View on Koozai.com

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