
Cancellation service N°1 in TÜRKİYE

Contract number:
To the attention of:
Cancellation Department – Windy
Cerrah Organize San. Bölgesi İnegöl - Bursa Karayolu 5. Km.
İnegöl
Subject: Contract Cancellation – Certified Email Notification
Dear Sir or Madam,
I hereby notify you of my decision to terminate contract number relating to the Windy service. This notification constitutes a firm, clear and unequivocal intention to cancel the contract, effective at the earliest possible date or in accordance with the applicable contractual notice period.
I kindly request that you take all necessary measures to:
– cease all billing from the effective date of cancellation;
– confirm in writing the proper receipt of this request;
– and, where applicable, send me the final statement or balance confirmation.
This cancellation is sent to you by certified email. The sending, timestamping and integrity of the content are established, making it equivalent proof meeting the requirements of electronic evidence. You therefore have all the necessary elements to process this cancellation properly, in accordance with the applicable principles regarding written notification and contractual freedom.
In accordance with the Consumer Rights Act 2015 and data protection regulations, I also request that you:
– delete all my personal data not necessary for your legal or accounting obligations;
– close any associated personal account;
– and confirm to me the effective deletion of data in accordance with applicable rights regarding privacy protection.
I retain a complete copy of this notification as well as proof of sending.
Yours sincerely,
11/01/2026
How to Cancel Windy: Simple Process
What is Windy
Windyis a weather and radar service widely used by hobbyists and professionals for detailed meteorological maps, multiple forecast models and real-time observation layers. The service presents data such as wind speed and direction, precipitation, temperature, meteograms and aviation-related information including METAR/TAF for many locations. Windy offers a free tier and a paid premium tier that unlocks higher temporal resolution, ad-free access and faster service. The app and web platform are developed by Windyty, SE and are popular with pilots, sailors, paragliders and people who need precise local weather data.
Subscription plans and pricing (overview)
Windy supplies an optional paid subscription (often marketed asWindy Premium) that has appeared in app stores and in third-party overviews as annual and monthly in-app purchase options. Reported prices vary by country and platform; common published amounts include an annual tier and a monthly tier. Pricing has changed over time and users report receiving notices when Windy adjusts its premium pricing.
| Plan | Typical price (reported) | Main benefit |
|---|---|---|
| Free | €0 | Core maps, models and basic forecasts |
| Windy Premium (annual) | Reported from $18.99 to $34.99/year (varies by market) | 1-hour detail, faster service, ad-free |
| Windy Premium (monthly) | Reported monthly options (higher per-month cost) | Same premium features billed monthly |
What users say about the service
Overall user sentiment about Windy’s forecasting and map tools is positive: many professionals praise its model selection and clarity. At the same time a portion of users comment that premium features and pricing changes influence whether they keep a paid plan. Community threads and review summaries show praise for the free functionality and critique when features that were previously free move behind paywalls. Discussions also show variations in regional forecast accuracy for specific coastal or local microclimates.
Customer experiences with cancellation
Users who discussed cancellation experiences report a range of outcomes. Some community and review posts describe cancellation as straightforward , while others mention frustration after price changes or unclear notices about renewals. Reports on the user community boards also show that when the company adjusts pricing, subscribers often question billing notices and seek clarity about renewal dates. These real-user discussions are useful for understanding common pain points: unexpected renewals, price increases, and the desire for clear proof of cancellation.
Paraphrasing feedback from public threads: some users say they were surprised by a subscription price increase and then considered cancelling. Other users welcomed premium features but emphasized the importance of keeping a clear record of any cancellation attempt in case of disputed charges. That combination — surprise at price changes and the need for evidence — is a recurring theme in user feedback from English-language forums focused on Europe and Ireland.
What works and what doesn't (user tips)
From the collected user experiences, the most reliable approach reported by cautious subscribers is to create a dated, verifiable record of the cancellation request and to keep transaction records. Users warn that informal or undocumented attempts to stop a subscription can lead to continued billing. Real users repeatedly stress documenting the date of the request and the payment reference for any refund discussions or disputes.
Why people cancel Windy
Reasons to cancel fall into predictable categories: cost sensitivity after price changes, feature expectations ( when specific forecast options are moved to premium), redundancy with other services, trial expirations that convert into paid subscriptions, or dissatisfaction with local forecast accuracy. When a price increase is announced users often evaluate whether the premium features still represent good value for their use case. Community threads indicate that price adjustments have been the single most common trigger for users to consider cancellation.
Legal background: consumer rights in Ireland
If you are a consumer in Ireland you have statutory protections when you buy digital services or subscribe to online services from traders in the EU. Distance selling rules and the EU Consumer Rights Directive create a cooling-off period and set information duties for traders. For many distance and online contracts the consumer enjoys a 14-day right to change mind, measured from the moment of contract formation, with certain exceptions for digital content once the content is delivered or activated. The government guidance notes that consumers should tell the seller in writing if they wish to cancel within the cooling-off period.
Irish consumer guidance and local sources reiterate the importance of retaining records of purchase, billing notices and any communication with the trader. If a trader fails to respect consumer rights, the Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (CCPC) and Small Claims procedures provide routes for dispute resolution within Ireland. Keeping documentary evidence is central to enforcing consumer rights.
Problem: why cancellation goes wrong
Cancellations commonly fail or become disputed when there is no clear record proving the date the consumer communicated their intent to stop the subscription. This problem arises when the consumer relies on informal statements with no legal proof or when they misunderstand renewal windows. Delays in processing a request or mismatched billing cycles also create confusion. Consumers who lack documentation are often disadvantaged if billing continues. This is exactly why a cancellation method that creates legally verifiable proof is strongly advisable.
Solution: the registered postal route (why postal mail is the only recommended method)
The safest, most legally defensible approach is to cancel by sending a registered postal letter. Registered mail creates a dated, third-party attested record that the consumer sent their notice and that it reached the recipient or was offered for delivery. This form of delivery carries evidential weight in dispute resolution and courts, and it avoids ambiguity about whether a message was received or acted upon. By choosing a registered postal route the consumer preserves a clear timeline and proof in situations where billing disputes or refund claims follow.
Registered postal cancellation is particularly valuable in cross-border or international subscriptions because it provides a paper trail independent from the platform or the seller’s own records. If a business changes its terms or pricing, the dated postal record shows the consumer’s position at a particular moment. For Irish consumers who may later escalate a complaint to the CCPC or to a small claims process, registered mail is among the most effective ways to establish that a cancellation was made on a specific date.
What to include in a postal cancellation (general principles)
When preparing to send a registered cancellation, include clear identification details so the recipient can match the request to the correct subscription: your full name, billing information (the last four digits of the card or the transaction reference if you have it), the account or username you used, and the date you wish the cancellation to take effect. State your intention to terminate the subscription and request written confirmation of the cancellation and any refund to which you may be entitled. Keep copies of any proof of purchase, receipts and bank statements that demonstrate recurring charges, as these support any later claims. These are general principles; avoid sending sensitive data beyond the minimum needed for identification.
Timing and notice periods
Check the date of the next renewal on your account records and send the registered letter well in advance of that date so the request can be processed within the contract’s billing cycle. Where statutory cooling-off rights apply, the 14-day period is an important benchmark. For renewals, cancelling with sufficient lead time avoids a new billing period starting while your cancellation is being processed. Because postal delivery and processing take time, earlier notification strengthens your position. Keep the registered mail receipt and any tracking information the postal provider supplies; these items are crucial if you need to prove the date you posted the cancellation.
| Aspect | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Proof of posting | Shows the date you requested cancellation and is third-party attested |
| Recipient address | Ensures the notice reaches the legal seat or billing office |
| Identification details | Helps recipient match the cancellation to the account |
Practical consequences of using registered post
Because registered post provides formal proof, it reduces the likelihood of a dispute about whether or when the consumer gave notice. If a trader continues to charge after receiving a properly addressed and documented registered notice, the consumer can escalate to their bank (for a chargeback) or to the CCPC and small claims process with stronger documentary evidence. Registered mail also often triggers a clearer internal handling process at vendors because it is treated as formal legal correspondence. That procedural clarity is a practical advantage when trying to stop recurring charges.
Record keeping and escalation
Keep a paper or electronic copy of the registered mail receipt and any returned delivery confirmation. Keep copies of bank statements that show subsequent charges. If a dispute arises, these documents create a chronology that supports a complaint to consumer protection authorities or a civil claim. In Ireland the CCPC and courts value dated documentary evidence when resolving billing disputes. The better your records, the easier it is to prove your case.
Making the process easier
To make the process easier, consider solutions that let you send legally valid postal notices without needing a printer or a trip to a post office. One such solution isPostclic, a 100% online service that prints, stamps and sends letters on your behalf. Postclic allows you to prepare cancellations from home, choose registered posting with return receipt and benefit from ready-made cancellation templates for subscriptions and services. You do not need a printer or to physically go to the post office; Postclic handles printing and posting for you and provides legal-value proof of sending. This can simplify cancellation while preserving the legal advantages of registered postal delivery. (Postclic is mentioned here as a practical, non-mandatory aid to reduce friction when choosing registered post as your cancellation route.)
Why Postclic is helpful in the registered-post approach
Postclic removes common barriers: no printer required, no need to visit a post office, and the service issues the same types of proof (registered posting, return receipt) that you would get if you mailed the letter yourself. When you are juggling multiple subscriptions or concerned about timing, Postclic’s templates and handling can reduce errors and ensure the formal registered mailing is completed correctly, producing evidence that is useful for consumer protection processes. Use it as a practical complement to the registered-post strategy.
Address to use for Windy (official address provided)
When you prepare a registered postal cancellation for the serviceWindy, include the official company address as a destination on the postal notice. The address to include is: Cerrah Organize San. Bölgesi İnegöl - Bursa Karayolu 5. Km. / İnegöl/Bursa/TÜRKİYE. Make sure the rest of the notice identifies your account clearly and requests a dated written confirmation of cancellation. Retain all proof of posting and delivery. (This paragraph supplies the official address for postal correspondence as requested.)
Common consumer questions
Does registered post guarantee a refund? Not automatically. Registered post establishes the date and proof of notice. Whether a refund is due depends on the subscription terms, the timing of the request, and any statutory cooling-off right that might apply. If you are within a statutory cancellation window, the provider will usually owe a refund for unused services. If outside those windows, entitlement to a refund depends on the provider’s refund policy and any contract terms that were disclosed at signup. In any dispute, registered-post evidence strengthens your position.
What if the provider says they never received the letter? Registered post normally supplies delivery confirmation. Use that confirmation in dispute resolution. If the provider claims non-receipt despite delivery confirmation, escalation to the CCPC or the small claims track in Ireland is a path to consider; your registered mail proof is central to those processes.
Handling renewal and timing disputes
When renewal timing is contested, a dated registered notice that arrives before the renewal date or within the cooling-off window is persuasive. Because renewal cycles differ, consumers should allow for postal handling time and send registered notices with enough lead time to reach the provider before a renewal charge posts. Keep the registered postage receipt and any delivery confirmation; those items form the foundation of a successful timing-based dispute.
| Situation | How registered post helps |
|---|---|
| Unexpected renewal charge | Provides proof you requested cancellation before the charge date |
| Price increase after subscription | Documents your objection or cancellation and the date it was posted |
| Refund claim | Supports a refund request with evidence of notice and timing |
Practical next steps before sending the registered cancellation
Gather the minimum identifying information you will include in the notice: the name on the account, a billing reference or the last four digits of the payment method used, the date you first subscribed and the date you want cancellation to take effect. Collect your bank statement lines showing the subscription charges so you can attach or reference them if needed. Decide the effective cancellation date and request written confirmation. When you send your registered notice, make sure the destination address is the one used for official correspondence; for Windy the official address provided above should be used. Keep the registered posting receipt and any tracking or return receipt for your records.
Dealing with continued charges after posting a registered notice
If charges continue after the provider has had reasonable time to process a registered notice, preserve all receipts and lodge a formal complaint with the provider in writing (again by registered post if you prefer an evidential trail). If the provider does not resolve the issue, contact your bank to discuss a dispute or refundable charge option and the CCPC for guidance on consumer escalation. Provide the CCPC or any small claims adjudicator with your registered post proof, payment records and the timeline of events. These materials are essential to pursue reimbursement or other remedies.
What to do after cancelling Windy
After dispatching your registered cancellation, monitor your bank statements for any further charges and keep the registered-post proof in a safe place. If you receive written confirmation from the provider, store that confirmation with your records. If the provider does not confirm within a reasonable time, use the registered-post receipt and delivery proof as the basis for any complaint to consumer authorities or for a bank dispute. Consider setting a calendar reminder to check your statement one billing cycle after cancellation so you can catch any residual charges early. Staying organised and relying on the registered-post evidence preserves your rights and makes any escalation far more effective.
Further steps if problems persist
If you cannot resolve the matter directly, prepare a concise timeline and copies of the registered-post evidence, bank statements showing charges and any replies you have received. Present those documents to the CCPC or to the small claims court if you need a legal remedy. Consumers commonly succeed when they can show a clear, documented chronology with an independent postal record of their cancellation request. Keep all originals and certified copies until the matter is finally closed.