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Kyezen is an AI assistant for managing digital subscription spending, built around “detect, remind, help cancel, and manage splits.” By connecting to Gmail with read-only access, it identifies subscription amounts, next billing dates, and categories for 30+ services such as Netflix, Spotify, Adobe, and Notion. Its Hello Kyezen feature then helps users draft cancellation emails; after the user confirms, [email protected] sends the message as an authorized agent.
From a payments/finance perspective, Kyezen is not currently a payment gateway, wallet, or card-issuing product. Instead, it acts as a subscription bill management layer. The company explicitly states that it does not handle funds: split payments between friends are still completed via Nequi, Yape, Mercado Pago, or bank transfer, while Kyezen only records proportions, balances, and sends reminders. Its risk-control highlight is a three-step authorization flow: users electronically sign an agency authorization during onboarding; before every real action, the full email is shown for confirmation; and all actions retain timestamped audit records of content and activity. Gmail access is OAuth read-only, with encrypted and revocable tokens.
Kyezen uses a freemium model: Free is permanently free, Core costs $3.99/month, Plus costs $7.99/month, and Pro costs $9.99/month. Tiers differ by limits on the number of subscriptions, cancellations, splits, and AI messages. The company started in Quito, Ecuador, and plans to launch first in Colombia, Mexico, and Ecuador. The app can be downloaded from other countries, but local offers and integrations will initially focus on those three markets.
Its strengths are a focused use case, low pricing, a free tier, and a relatively clear approach to user authorization and auditing for “AI-operated” actions. Split reminders also fit well with Latin American P2P payment habits. The drawbacks are that it is still in a waitlist/early-access stage, so production stability is unproven; it does not provide actual payment collection, settlement, or virtual cards; and it has not disclosed any financial licenses. Any future virtual card offering would still require cooperation with a regulated issuer. Kyezen is best suited for individual users and freelancers in Latin America who have many subscriptions, often forget to cancel trials, or need to track shared expenses with friends.
The source text does not provide information on network accessibility from China, so this remains unknown. For users in China, Kyezen’s regional focus, language, Gmail dependency, and Latin America-oriented payment scenarios may limit its usefulness. More practical alternatives include Alipay/WeChat bill management, bank app recurring-payment controls, budgeting apps, or international subscription management tools such as Rocket Money and Bobby.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on kyezen.com official site.
kyezen.com is an Unknown vcc provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach kyezen.com directly.