To cancel MedRevisions, sign in and open your account's billing or subscription settings — or cancel through your app store if you subscribed there. For most MedRevisions plans, though, there is nothing to cancel: access is sold as a fixed term, so it simply ends on your expiry date unless you choose to extend. The one thing to know up front is that MedRevisions' terms state refunds are not given once access has started, so if you are on a recurring plan, cancel before your next billing date to avoid a further charge.
Key takeaways
- MedRevisions plans are largely fixed-term — many people don't need to "cancel" at all; access lapses on the expiry date.
- If you have a recurring plan, manage it in your account's billing settings, or via the App Store / Google Play if you bought it there.
- Per MedRevisions' terms, refunds are generally not issued once access has begun — so cancel before the next billing date.
- Your question history and bookmarks are kept if you return later, so leaving is low-risk.
- If you're switching because the fit isn't right, choose your next bank by how you learn, not just price.
How do I cancel MedRevisions, step by step?
The exact route depends on how you bought your plan, so check the terms you agreed to at checkout. In general:
- Sign in to your MedRevisions account.
- Open your profile or account settings and look for Billing & Subscription.
- If you see an active recurring subscription, manage or cancel the renewal there, in line with the terms you accepted.
- If you subscribed through an app store (Apple App Store or Google Play), cancel from the store's subscription settings — not from MedRevisions.
If anything is unclear, contact MedRevisions support through the in-site help or the email on their contact page, and keep written confirmation of your request. Monitor your statement for a billing cycle or two afterwards to confirm no further charge appears.
Before you cancel — what will you lose?
Worth a moment's thought, especially if your exam is close. While your subscription is active you have the full bank of around 5,400 questions, the study notes, the Smart Revision spaced-repetition tool and the AI Study Assistant. When access lapses, you lose those until you return.
The reassuring part: MedRevisions keeps your data. Your question history, answered questions, bookmarks and Smart Revision queue are retained, so if you extend later you pick up where you left off. Cancelling is not destructive — which makes it a low-stakes decision.
Where should you go next?
If you're leaving because MedRevisions isn't the right fit, here are the main PLAB 1 and UKMLA options at a glance. Prices change, so verify current rates before subscribing.
| Tool | Best for | Approx. price | Native app? |
|---|---|---|---|
| iatroX | A complete learning platform — adaptive practice, Socratic tutoring and clinical reference | £29/mo or £99/yr | Yes (iOS + Android) |
| PassMedicine | Largest bank and peer familiarity for finals/UKMLA | ~£20–35 | Web-focused |
| Quesmed | Multi-exam coverage with notes, video and OSCE | from ~£14.99/mo | Yes |
| Pastest | Depth and quality of explanations | ~£50–100 (3–6 mo) | Yes |
| PLABable | PLAB-specific volume and community at low cost | Budget | Web-focused |
How do I switch mid-prep without losing momentum?
The trap is "platform sprawl" — chaining one subscription to the next and spending more time choosing tools than answering questions. To switch cleanly: note the topics MedRevisions had flagged as weak, pick one primary bank, and start there immediately rather than sampling several.
If you move to iatroX, the practical advantage when switching is that its adaptive engine re-finds your weak areas quickly rather than making you start from a blank slate, its Socratic Tutor works through the reasoning behind a question rather than only showing the answer, and Ask iatroX lets you check any answer against UK guidance (NICE, CKS, SIGN and the SmPC) — useful if you're an IMG translating from a different national guideline. iatroX covers PLAB 1 and UKMLA on one subscription (£29/month or £99/year), with free sample questions if you want to try it before committing.
Frequently asked questions
Do I get a refund if I cancel MedRevisions? Generally no. MedRevisions' terms state that cancellation or refund is not permitted once the service has started, so refunds are not typically issued. Cancel before your next billing date to avoid a further charge; access continues to the end of the paid period.
Does MedRevisions auto-renew? Many MedRevisions plans are sold as fixed-term access that ends on the expiry date and prompts you to extend, rather than renewing silently. If you are on a recurring plan, check and manage renewal in your account's billing settings, or via your app store if you purchased there.
Will I lose my progress if I cancel? No. MedRevisions retains your question history, answers, bookmarks and Smart Revision queue, so you can resume from where you left off if you return later.
What is the best alternative to MedRevisions for PLAB 1? It depends on how you learn: PassMedicine for the largest familiar bank, PLABable for low-cost PLAB-specific volume, Pastest for explanation depth, or iatroX for adaptive practice with Socratic tutoring and integrated clinical reference. There is no single "best" — match the tool to your style and timeline.
Can I use MedRevisions and another bank at the same time? Yes, and many candidates run a primary bank plus a complementary tool. The caution is cost and time — two banks is sensible; sprawling across four is not.
