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Recurring billing is a payment method where customers are automatically charged at regular intervals (weekly, monthly, quarterly, or annually) for ongoing access to a product or service. It is also referred to as subscription billing, automatic billing, or recurring charges, and is a core feature of every subscription-based business.
Mechanically, the customer authorizes the charge once at signup, and the payment processor stores the payment credentials as a secure token. From then on, the system automatically charges the customer each billing cycle based on the agreed-upon plan, continuing until the customer cancels, upgrades to a different plan, or a payment fails.
This automation removes the need to manually invoice each cycle, reduces missed payments, and supports predictable monthly recurring revenue, which is why subscription brands treat recurring billing as the foundation of their billing infrastructure.
Most recurring billing setups fall into one of three models:
A streaming service like Netflix charges users a fixed fee every month until the subscription is canceled. This is a classic example of fixed recurring billing.
For an ecommerce subscription brand, a coffee subscription that ships a $30 bag every month is also fixed recurring billing. If the same brand lets customers add an optional $8 grinder cleaning kit on every third shipment, the combined charge becomes hybrid recurring billing, since it pairs a consistent base with a variable add-on.
Make it easy for customers to manage, pause, or cancel their subscription. Transparency builds trust and reduces voluntary churn. Equally important is what happens when a charge fails: a strong dunning process (smart retries, card update prompts, customer notifications) directly reduces involuntary churn, which is often the single largest source of subscriber loss in recurring billing models.