We have made it super easy to cancel Washington Post Print Edition subscription
at the root to avoid any and all mediums "The Washington Post" (the developer) uses to bill you.
Now let us get into the crux of this guide.
Table of Contents:
There are a few things you must do and know before canceling subscriptions. They are:
We have made it super easy to cancel Washington Post Print Edition subscription at the root to avoid any and all mediums "The Washington Post" (the developer) uses to bill you. Now let us get into the crux of this guide.
To cancel Washington Post Print Edition subscription on Android, you need to realize that deleting the Washington Post Print Edition app alone won't cut it. Follow the steps below:
Once your Washington Post Print Edition subscription has been removed from Google Play, your future subscriptions will be cancelled and won't be renewed anymore.
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To cancel Washington Post Print Edition subscription on your Mac, do the following:
Note: Always make sure to use the exact username and ID you used to set up the subscription to manage that subscription when necessary. This is sometimes different from the Apple ID or Android brand ID you have set up.
If you don't remember your password however, contact the App for help/to reset password.
To cancel your Washington Post Print Edition subscription on PayPal, do the following:
Here's how to cancel your Washington Post Print Edition subscription when billed through a payments provider that is not the Appstore, Playstore or Paypal.
Sometimes, you may start a subscription directly on a company's website without using an extra layer of security like Paypal or Apple. To unsubscribe, you might have to sign into Washington Post Print Edition's website or directly reach out to their payments provider.
Generally, here are some steps you can take if you find yourself in that fix:
You might have created an account on Washington Post Print Edition during the course of using the app. Many apps make it so easy to signup but a nightmare to delete your account. We try to make it easier but since we don't have information for every app, we can only do our best.
Generally, here are some steps you can take if you need your account deleted:
*Pro-tip: Once you visit any of the links above, Use your browser "Find on page" to find "@". It immediately shows the neccessary emails.
Bonus: How to Delete Washington Post Print Edition from your iPhone or Android.
To delete Washington Post Print Edition from your iPhone, Follow these steps:
Method 2:
Go to Settings and click on General then click on "iPhone Storage". You will then scroll down to see the list of all the apps installed on your iPhone. Tap on the app you want to uninstall and delete the app.
For iOS 11 and above:
Go into your Settings and click on "General" and then click on iPhone Storage. You will see the option "Offload Unused Apps". Right next to it is the "Enable" option. Click on the "Enable" option and this will offload the apps that you don't use.
Our crowdsourced data from Washington Post Print Edition and Justuseapp users, shows that it is Unrated to cancel a Washington Post Print Edition subscription.
If you haven't rated Washington Post Print Edition cancellation policy yet, Rate it here →.
THE WASHINGTON POST PRINT EDITION Enjoy a digital replica of each day’s print edition, down to every photo and special insert. Stay informed with award-winning national and international news, as well as complete local news coverage of the D.C. metro area. Read stories wherever you are with convenient offline reading. This app brings you everything daily Washington Post readers enjoy—along with extra benefits for added mobile convenience. PRODUCT FEATURES ▪ PRINT EDITION: Flip through The Washington Post right on your iPad and iPhone with our digital replica of each day’s print newspaper. ▪ MY POST: Save your must-read articles for offline reading when it’s convenient for you. ▪ INTELLIGENT DOWNLOADING: We'll learn which sections you read the most, and download them in the background every morning. Don't read a section? We'll keep it off your device to free space, and keep it available if you'd like to read it. ▪ ARCHIVE: Browse the last two weeks of Print Editions. See the top stories and lead images of the day. SUBSCRIPTION DETAILS ▪ OPTIONS: Download the app for free and enjoy a limited number of free stories each month. Get unlimited access for just $14.99/month (first month FREE). ▪ EXTRAS: Your subscription to The Washington Post comes with complimentary web access, as well as access to The All-New Washington Post App on all your smartphones and tablets. ▪ PAYMENT: Payment will be charged to your iTunes account with the confirmation of your purchase. ▪ AUTO-R...
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So I don’t want to change the star rating, because this is truly a GREAT app. Wish NY TImes and Wall Street Journal would get onboard already, jeez. But there is some room for improvement. For example, if my screen times out for any reason (naps over the Sunday paper, snack breaks,etc.) I lose my place where I was reading, and I’m taken back to the Home Screen. A little annoying to have to flip back through sections... I read the paper how I read a book, just straight through, so I’m not always mindful of what page or section I left off on. Also, the tap to enter web content feature is TOO sensitive. Annoyingly so. A lot of the time that I try to swipe to turn the page, I’m redirected to the ask if I want to open the webpage, or just taken straight there. That honestly does disrupt by flow quite a bit. Would be better if there was one link per page to go to the webpage, instead of making the whole page a link. This also happens when I try to zoom in on text or images.
On so much of what trump does as president that is dishonest and troubling for the highest public servant of our country. Please speak to other professional journalist. Instead of judging Mueller we are supppse to be Evaluating Whether trump did illegal behavior that meets impeachable offenses. If GOP were willing to impeach over lying about sex with an intern surely trump repeatly intentionally trying to impede a federal investigation, Campaign finance fraud, and his campaign accepting stolen emails by a foreign government is impeachable. Shame those public servants who swore to protect the country. Also report on what has been done to shore up problems with our elections over the past 2 and 1/2 years . If nothing done all responsible should be voted out. Thank you for all the hard work you all do to bring facts to light. Beth Smith
The journalism and coverage is very good, but I have been reading the publication on an iPad and an iPhone and find that functions such as page turning and zooming frequently go awry on both platforms. Pages may turn when I intend to zoom in, a section often closes when I mean to turn a page, or the fuller version of an article opens when I’m merely trying to scroll within the print edition. Most frustrating is that often, when I am scrolling within an article, the app interprets intention to scroll as a command to zoom out; thus, I constantly find myself having to resize the text, which is quite annoying and distracting. Isn’t there a way to make these features behave more deliberately?
In my late 70’s and lIterally a lifelong subscriber to the New York Times (across the country) I recently subscribed to the Washington Post for my wife. I do not rate the content. I cannot favor the brother over the sister. Much to my surprise, however, I am finding the Post is leagues ahead, at least for now, in digital design and app format and ease of use. It’s not my field (law was). In another century in the pre-Facebook Internet I knew, used and understood much of the leading edge. Not now. My comments about “design” and “app format” are genuine but are grounded in my current experience of “ease of use” — about which I am still fully competent to testify Bill Cook New Orleans La
Whether you like the content or not, the Post is the best enewspaper. It gives you an authentic page turning experience of each edition (a feature sorely missed in WSJ and NYT), ease in reading articles as if in print by enlarging on screen or opening, and my favorite +++ the ability to easily share links (via text, email, or social media) that give others the ability to read the full article. This last one seems a no brainer function (but is annoyingly unavailable on USATODAY) that lets me share noteworthy articles with friends and colleagues for discussion and information.