Cancelling subscription
You can cancel your Bulido subscription any time, without contacting support. Cancellation doesn't delete your account — your data stays, access to the app runs out at the end of the paid period, and you can resume the subscription whenever you want.
Step by step
- Go to Settings → Billing.
- The Subscription section shows the current status (e.g. "Subscription active").
- Click Cancel subscription.
- Bulido asks for confirmation.
After cancellation, the status changes to "Subscription expiring". The subscription keeps working until the end of the paid period, then expires.
What happens after cancellation
- Access to the dashboard keeps working until the end of the paid period (e.g. if you paid for a month on the 5th and cancel on the 20th, you have full access until the next 5th).
- The next payment isn't taken. Bulido won't charge the card after cancellation.
- Your data stays: quotes, clients, projects, photos, settings. Nothing disappears. It's all on standby in case you decide to resume.
- Once the period runs out, dashboard access is blocked. The status changes to "Subscription expired".
Resuming the subscription
After cancelling (but before expiry), you can hit Resume subscription with the same button in the Subscription section. The cancellation is undone and future payments go back on schedule.
Once the subscription has expired, you resume by reactivating: pick a plan, pay by card, and access comes back immediately. Your earlier data is available right away.
Cancellation ≠ account deletion
Two different things:
- Cancelling the subscription: you stop paying, the data stays, you can come back.
- Deleting the account: you wipe everything permanently, no way back.
If you just want to stop paying but keep the option to come back, cancel the subscription. If you want a definitive end, see How to delete your Bulido account.
No refund for unused time
Cancellation doesn't trigger a refund for unused time. If you paid for a year and cancel after 2 months, you keep access through the end of the paid year, but the 10 unused months aren't refunded.
What's next
Last updated May 6, 2026