How Do I Create Separate Cards for Each Subscription With DogPay?
Subscriptions get messy fast—especially when you’re paying for AI tools, cloud software, ad platforms, and global SaaS across multiple teams. One shared card turns into a catch-all: renewals hit at unpredictable times, vendors change billing descriptors, and it becomes hard to tell which tool is driving spend.
Creating a separate card per subscription in DogPay helps you isolate each vendor, cap exposure, and make cancellations clean—without disrupting other tools.
The problem: why subscription charges get out of control Most subscription pain comes from a few common patterns: One card funds everything: When dozens of tools share a single payment method, you lose clear vendor-level ownership. Auto-renew surprises: Annual renewals, free-trial conversions, and mid-cycle upgrades can post when you’re not watching. Merchant name mismatches: The charge on your statement may not match the brand name your team recognizes. Failed payments create fire drills: A decline on the shared card can interrupt multiple tools at once. Cancellations are hard to enforce: Even after “cancel,” some vendors attempt follow-up charges or invoices.
A dedicated card per subscription reduces blast radius: if one vendor misbehaves, it doesn’t affect the rest of your stack.
What “separate cards per subscription” solves Using DogPay to issue one card per tool (or per tool + team) gives you practical controls: Clean attribution: Each vendor maps to one card, making it easier to identify what the charge is for. Vendor isolation: If a subscription needs to be paused, you can stop that card without touching other software. Spend control per tool: Keep a predictable ceiling for each subscription rather than one large pooled limit. Simpler off-