News & publishing · US
How hard is it to cancel National Review?
National Review scores 63/100 (grade C) for how clearly it documents cancellation in the US — a partially documented cancellation policy with notable gaps. Cancellation is available via online (self-serve), phone.
National Review subscribers (both NRPLUS digital and print) can cancel through the Customer Care portal by logging in, clicking MY ACCOUNT, and navigating to the Customer Care link. Phone cancellation is also available via customer service. Upon cancellation, subscribers receive a prorated refund based on unserved issues; cancellation takes effect immediately though one additional print issue may arrive due to future-dating. Print subscribers may also suspend delivery rather than cancel outright.
How to cancel National Review
- Channels: online (self-serve), phone
- Official cancellation page: https://www.nationalreview.com/hc/
- Pause/freeze: available — Print subscribers can suspend (pause) delivery via the Customer Care portal. The option is listed alongside cancel, renew, and address-change options after logging in.
- Account/data deletion: National Review maintains a Privacy Policy (updated June 4, 2025) at nationalreview.com/privacy-policy/. Specific data deletion request procedures are described there; direct fetch was blocked, but the policy page is the documented channel for privacy rights requests. https://www.nationalreview.com/privacy-policy/
Evidence
- {'title': 'Help Center | National Review (accessed 2026-06-06)', 'url': 'https://www.nationalreview.com/hc/'}
- {'title': 'FAQ - Frequently Asked Questions | National Review (accessed 2026-06-06)', 'url': 'https://www.nationalreview.com/frequently-asked-questions/'}
- Last reviewed 2026-06-06 · scope: documented public policy.
Scope & fairness
This is the Documented-Policy tier: it measures how clearly the cancellation policy is published (cited, dated facts), not the behavioural experience of cancelling (Verified-Flow audit pending). Every company is scored on the same five dimensions with the same published weights — scores cannot be bought or removed. It is opinion grounded in disclosed facts, and not legal advice.
Is this wrong? Companies can request a correction ->
Cite this. Cancel Atlas (2026). “National Review — Cancellation Friction Index (US).” CES-1.1. https://www.cancelatlas.com/c/national-review-us (CC BY-SA 4.0).
See National Review in the full index -> · How we score · Open data