Bank statements contain all the information you need to understand your spending — but the format is deliberately abbreviated, and merchant names are often cryptic abbreviations that mean nothing at first glance. This guide explains what everything means, line by line.
The Anatomy of a Bank Statement
Every bank statement follows roughly the same structure, whether you're looking at a PDF or an online portal. Here's what each part means:
The statement period
The date range at the top tells you which billing cycle this covers — typically 30 days. Your statement lists every transaction that posted in that window. Transactions that happened on the last day of the month may appear on the next statement if they hadn't settled yet.
Opening and closing balance
The opening balance is what was in your account at the start of the period. The closing balance is what's left at the end, after all debits and credits. The difference between them shows your net spending or savings for that period.
Transaction columns
Each transaction has three key fields:
- Date: When the transaction posted (settled), not necessarily when you made it. A purchase made Friday evening might post Monday.
- Description: The merchant name — usually abbreviated and sometimes cryptic. This is what we'll decode below.
- Amount: What was charged. Debits (money out) are shown as negative or in a "withdrawals" column; credits (money in) are positive or in a "deposits" column.
Decoding Merchant Descriptors
The merchant description is the most important and most confusing part of any bank statement. Banks are limited to a specific number of characters, and merchants often use a parent company name or payment processor name instead of their consumer-facing brand.
| What you see | What it actually is |
|---|---|
APPLE.COM/BILL | Any App Store subscription, iCloud storage, Apple TV+, Apple Music, Apple One, Apple Arcade — or any third-party app purchased through the App Store |
AMZN MKTP | Amazon Marketplace purchase or Amazon Prime membership |
NETFLIX.COM | Netflix subscription |
PADDLE.COM | Payment processor used by hundreds of software companies — search the exact amount to identify the specific app |
FASTSPRING | Another software payment processor — same as Paddle |
PAYPAL * [NAME] | A purchase or subscription processed through PayPal — the name after the asterisk is usually the merchant |
GOOGLE *SERVICES | Google One storage, YouTube Premium, or a Google Play subscription |
SP * [NAME] | A Shopify-powered store — the name is usually the merchant name |
STRIPE [NAME] | A Stripe-processed payment — often for SaaS tools, newsletters, or small subscription businesses |
RECURLY | Subscription billing platform — the merchant should be identifiable by the amount |
If you see a descriptor you don't recognize, the fastest way to identify it is to Google the exact text from your statement plus the word "subscription" or "charge." Reddit threads, billing support pages, and consumer complaint boards often have exact matches.
Skip the manual audit entirely.
Kaleran connects to your bank and automatically identifies every recurring charge — with the actual service name, not the cryptic billing descriptor. Free to start.
How to Spot Recurring Charges
Subscription charges have distinctive patterns that make them identifiable once you know what to look for:
Same amount, same merchant, different dates
The most obvious pattern: $14.99 from NETFLIX.COM appearing every month. If you sort your statement by the description column and look for repetition, subscriptions stand out immediately.
Charges that fall on the same day each month
Subscriptions typically bill on the anniversary of your signup date. If you signed up on the 15th, expect charges on the 15th of every month. Look for charges that cluster around specific dates.
Common subscription price points
Subscription services almost always charge at common price points: $0.99, $1.99, $2.99, $4.99, $6.99, $7.99, $9.99, $12.99, $14.99, $19.99. If you see a charge at one of these amounts from a merchant you don't immediately recognize, it's very likely a subscription.
Annual charges buried in older statements
Annual subscriptions are easy to miss because they only appear once a year. If you're only looking at your most recent statement, you'll miss them. Pull statements from 12–14 months back to catch annual renewals — Amazon Prime ($139/yr), Adobe ($599/yr), antivirus software, VPNs, and professional association memberships all fall in this category.
Common Types of Charges to Look For
Streaming and entertainment
Netflix, Hulu, Disney+, Max, Paramount+, Apple TV+, YouTube Premium, Spotify, Apple Music, Tidal, Amazon Music — these are usually clearly labeled but easy to accumulate. Many households have 4–6 streaming services they're paying for simultaneously.
Software and productivity tools
Adobe Creative Cloud ($54.99/mo), Microsoft 365 ($9.99/mo), Notion, Grammarly, LastPass, 1Password, Dropbox, Google One — these often appear under payment processor names rather than the product name.
Health and fitness
Gym memberships, Peloton ($44/mo), Noom, Headspace, Calm, MyFitnessPal Premium. These are especially prone to being forgotten because usage tends to drop over time while billing continues.
News and publications
The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Athletic, Substack newsletters — often at annual prices that are easy to overlook.
What to Do With What You Find
Once you've gone through your statements, you'll have a list of recurring charges. For each one:
- Identify what it is (use the decoder table above if needed)
- Decide: do I actively use this? Did I use it in the last 30 days?
- Cancel anything you don't use. Most services can be cancelled through Account Settings → Billing in about 2 minutes.
- For charges you can't identify, contact the merchant directly or dispute with your bank.
For a deeper look at the specific warning signs that a charge is a subscription you forgot about, read our guide on finding forgotten subscriptions on your bank statement. If you want to understand the true scale of what you might be spending, the numbers in are subscriptions eating your paycheck might be eye-opening.