Support "Every X days" or "X times per N" cadence
complete
Jen from Lunch Money
Some subscriptions bill every 30 days. Allow some flexibility in the recurring cadence.
Log In
Din from Lunch Money
Merged in a post:
Offer an "Every 4 weeks" cadence
J
John
The choices of cadence when setting up recurring items include "Every 2 weeks" and "Monthly", but not "Every 4 weeks". My New York Times subscription, for example, is 4-weekly so it usually doesn't get picked up as a recurring items and I have to manually link it.
Din from Lunch Money
Adding an "every 4 weeks" cadence is now possible with the new custom cadence option added in release #220: https://feedback.lunchmoney.app/changelog/220
Jen from Lunch Money
complete
Recurring Items now supports custom cadences! Set any quantity and granularity, such as "every 10 days" or "every 4 weeks"!
This feature was released in #220 (https://feedback.lunchmoney.app/changelog/220). Thanks for voting!
Jen from Lunch Money
in progress
M
Maria Kulikova
Same as everyone else! I get paid different amounts every 2 weeks, and pet food subscriptions are commonly every 6 weeks.
Jen from Lunch Money
planned
V
Victor
Just confirming what others have said, but with one side note. I have a subscription that is billed every 4 weeks or 28 days. This can lead to a case where in some months I am billed twice.
Jen from Lunch Money
under review
Jen from Lunch Money
Merged in a post:
Support X times per month
A
Alex Inman
I have a recurring expense that happens 4 times per month and there is no option when setting up a recurring expense to choose how many times a month it happens. The only options I see for monthly are "Monthly" or "Twice a month". It'd be nice to be able to support "X times per month".
Jen from Lunch Money
Merged in a post:
Custom cadence for recurring transactions
A
Andrew Leonard
It would be great to have more granularity in the cadence for recurring transactions. Some services I use have a cadence longer than 1 year. Fastmail is one example (3 years) and Porkbun would be another example on the much higher end (10 years)
Load More
→