Brown Industries Treasury
operator luxury
Household Finance OS
ModeJun 7, 2026
Flagship shelllive preview
Operator session
household finance os · recurring intelligencelive api feed · household 22222222-2222-2222-2222-222222222222

Recurring spend, framed as signal instead of clutter.

Candidate subscriptions, repeat bills, and charge rhythms are flowing from the live recurring-patterns endpoint. This panel surfaces cadence, exposure, and confidence so the household can spot drag before it feels mysterious.

Command brief
Recurring control room
The juicy bit: how much repeat spend is visible, how believable the detection is, and where the next likely hits are lining up.
Highest-confidence target
No signal yet
Import more months to sharpen recurring detection.
Pattern density
No recurring set yet
The model needs more history before subscriptions separate from noise.
Forward look
No dates forecast
Next-expected timing will populate once recurring cycles are inferred with more confidence.
Detected patterns
0

Live recurring candidates returned from the API.

High-confidence set
0

Candidates at or above 80% confidence.

Peak confidence

Strongest signal currently available.

Estimated monthly exposure

Rough monthlyized drag based on cadence and max observed amount.

Module

Pattern roster

No recurring candidates detected yet. Feed the system more transaction history and the signal engine starts separating subscriptions from ordinary noise.

Module

Operator notes

Why this matters
Recurring drift is sneaky. One cheap monthly charge is fine; a pile of them becomes a household tax no one consciously approved.
What sharpens the model
More history, cleaner merchant normalization, and fewer unresolved queue items all improve the quality of recurring inference.
Best next move
Import another chunk of transaction history so the detector has enough temporal spacing to infer actual cycles.
Operator Luxury rule: don’t worship automation just because it looks fancy. Let the model spot patterns, then let the human decide what deserves a permanent slot in the household cost stack.