When employees move on, services can go dark without warning or you end up paying for duplicate subscriptions without realising it. A subscription card keeps your recurring payments under control.
Someone leaves the company, and a week later Slack goes down. Turns out their business card was the one on file – and now it’s cancelled. Cue the scramble: which services are tied to whose card? What are you even paying for? How much is it all costing?
For growing businesses, subscription chaos is a real problem, and it usually only becomes visible when something breaks. A solution is a subscription card: one place for all your recurring software costs, with no loose ends when people come and go.
A subscription card is a standard debit or credit card that you use exclusively for recurring subscriptions.
Think Slack, Google Ads, Trello or Meta. Instead of letting these payments scatter across different team members' cards, everything runs through one card (or a set of dedicated cards) to make it simple.
Team cards work well for one-off expenses. But recurring subscriptions are a different story. When an employee leaves and their card gets cancelled, any services tied to it can go dark without warning.
With a subscription card, you don't have to play a detective every time someone moves on. Everything is already in place. Updating payment details across services becomes a straightforward task.
Data breaches are more common than ever. If a card number gets compromised through a third-party service, having a dedicated subscription card means only that card needs to be cancelled and replaced.
With a subscription card, your main business card stays safe, and your other payments aren't disrupted.
When all your subscriptions go through the same card, you can see exactly what you are paying for at a glance. It's much easier to spot services nobody's using anymore or duplicates you didn't realise you had.
Your bookkeeper will thank you too, since subscription transactions can be automatically tagged for accounting.
There are two ways to use a subscription card:
Either approach works, it just depends on how your team operates and how much separation you want.
Subscription cards are built into Holvi as virtual debit or credit cards, so there is nothing extra to set up or pay for. They exist exclusively as virtual cards and are included in every Holvi plan as standard. However, a subscription card doesn’t come as an addition to your free virtual card. Extra cards beyond that will incur additional charges.
No more chasing down payment cards. A subscription card keeps your critical services running, whether you are dealing with team changes or a security breach.
And how do you manage your subscriptions? That’s entirely up to you.