Canceling a paid HubSpot subscription does not immediately delete your data. Your account downgrades to HubSpot’s free tools at the end of your commitment term, and your contact and deal records remain accessible. However, if the resulting free account then sits inactive for 120 days, HubSpot deactivates it. You then have 90 days after that to reactivate before the account and its data are permanently purged. Total worst case: roughly 210 days of inactivity from your last login until your data is gone for good, with no recovery path afterward.
If you are reading this because you are actively considering canceling HubSpot or because you have already canceled and are wondering what happens next, the short version is this: your data is not deleted the moment your subscription ends, but it is also not protected indefinitely. There is a clock ticking, and most people do not realize it is ticking until it has nearly run out.
HubSpot does not allow mid-contract cancellations. To cancel a paid subscription, you turn off auto-renewal. This means the subscription is canceled at the end of your current commitment term, not the moment you decide to cancel. If you are eight months into a 12-month contract and turn off auto-renewal, you will continue to be billed and have full access until month 12, at which point the subscription ends and is not renewed.
Once the commitment term ends, your account is downgraded to HubSpot’s free tools. It is not deleted. From there, you have the option to delete the account entirely if you choose to.
This is the part that surprises people in the best way. According to HubSpot’s own community guidance, contact and deal records are not subject to paid features, and they continue to exist after a subscription ends, just as they did before. If you cancel your Sales and Marketing Hub subscription, your contacts and deals do not vanish. They remain in your now-free account.
What you lose access to immediately is anything gated behind the paid tier you were on: premium features, advanced reporting, certain automation capabilities, and any backup-related features that were tied to your Enterprise subscription specifically. If you were relying on HubSpot’s native automated backup feature (Enterprise-only), that capability disappears the moment you downgrade, even though your underlying data does not.
Here is where the real risk begins, and where most of the confusion in HubSpot’s own community forums comes from. Once your account is on the free tier, HubSpot's inactivity policy applies:
120 days of inactivity leads to deactivation. If nobody logs in and the HubSpot Sales extension is not used for 120 days, the account is deactivated. Inactivity here is account-wide. It does not matter that the data is still sitting there. What matters is whether anyone has logged in.
90 days after deactivation leads to permanent deletion. Once deactivated, HubSpot sends an email with a sign-in link to reactivate the account. You have 90 days from deactivation to log back in. If you do, the account reactivates and the data is intact. If you do not, after those 90 days the account is purged from HubSpot’s systems entirely.
After that point, there’s no recovery path. HubSpot’s own community moderators have confirmed this directly to users who missed the window. Once the 90-day post-deactivation period elapses, the portal has been removed from HubSpot’s records and cannot be restored. The only option at that point is to start over with a new, empty account.
Add it up: roughly 120 + 90 = 210 days of total inactivity from the last login to permanent, irreversible data loss. That is about seven months. It is long enough that a company going through a CRM migration, a leadership change, an extended pause in operations, or simply deprioritizing a tool they have already mentally moved on from can blow past it without anyone noticing.
This is not a hypothetical. The pattern shows up repeatedly in HubSpot’s own community forums. A company cancels its subscription, often as part of switching to a different CRM. The free downgraded account sits untouched while the team focuses on the new system. Months later, sometimes when someone goes looking for a historical record, a past deal, or an old contact list, they find the account no longer exists. By the time anyone checks back in, the 210-day window has already closed.
The irony is that the very reason people stop logging into the old account (“we have moved everything to the new system, we do not need this anymore”) is the same reason nobody notices the clock running out. Nobody checks an account they believe they are done with.
If you are in the process of leaving HubSpot, whether you are switching to a different CRM or simply downsizing, there is a specific window where your historical HubSpot data is at its most vulnerable: after you have stopped actively using it, but before 210 days of silence have passed.
A few things worth doing during this window, regardless of whether you ultimately plan to delete the account:
Export your data while you still have full access. HubSpot’s own support guidance, when responding to cancellation questions in the community, consistently points users toward exporting their content and data as a first step. It is worth doing this before the downgrade takes effect, while you still have access to whatever export capabilities your current tier provides.
Don’t assume “the account still exists” means “the data is safe.” An account sitting in free-tier limbo, technically still active, is exactly the kind of asset that falls through organizational cracks. If the person who handled the HubSpot migration leaves the company, or if checking on the old HubSpot account simply is not anyone's job anymore, the inactivity clock keeps running regardless.
Consider whether a point-in-time export is enough or whether you need a structured backup. A one-time export captures a snapshot of the data types that export supports, in the format export supports. As covered in our guide on How to Back up HubSpot CRM, this does not include associations between records, engagement history, workflows, or configuration. If your organization may need to reference this data in its original, relational context later, and not just as a flat archive, a proper backup taken before cancellation preserves far more than an export does. It is also not subject to HubSpot’s account-activity clock at all, because it lives outside HubSpot entirely.
Canceling HubSpot does not trigger immediate data loss. That is the reassuring part, and it is accurate. But “your data is currently fine” and “your data is protected” are different statements. The former is true the day you cancel. Whether the latter remains true seven months later depends entirely on whether anyone remembers an account they have already mentally closed the book on. HubSpot’s inactivity timeline does not pause for organizational forgetfulness.
If you are canceling, downgrading, or migrating away from HubSpot, the lowest-effort, highest-value action is also the simplest: take a complete backup of your data before you stop paying attention to the account, not after.