I opened my bank statement last month and found ₹3,847 leaving every month for things I'd forgotten I owned.
Nine subscriptions. A news app I trialed in March. Cloud storage I was already paying for somewhere else. A fitness app from a resolution that died in February. A VPN I used twice. A “pro” tier of something I can't even remember downloading.
None of them had ever sent me an email. None had reminded me they were still charging me. They didn't have to — they had my card.
So I went looking for something that would just tell me what I was paying for. Every app I found wanted more: log into your bank, categorize your groceries, follow a budget, rate your financial health. I didn't want a coach. I wanted a list.
So I built Billow.
Upload your statement. Billow pulls out your subscriptions, shows you what they cost, and pings you before the next charge lands. No bank logins. No budgets. No opinions about your coffee.
The name is the thing it fights. Money billows — soft, invisible, everywhere — when you're not watching it. Billow just makes it visible.
If it catches one subscription you forgot, it's paid for itself ten times over.
— Sinnoor C, founder