Quick Answer:
Use Squareâs Dashboard on Desktop
You can only delete your Square account from a desktop browser, not the mobile app. Go to Account & Settings > Business Information and scroll down to Deactivate Account. Follow the prompts, confirm, and youâre done.
If you're closing your store, switching POS systems, or just cutting tools you no longer use â deleting your Square account is something you want to get right.
Miss a step, and you could lose important data or keep getting billed even after you're out.
Iâve been through this process myself, and helped other retail and print-on-demand sellers do the same.
This guide breaks down exactly how to shut down your Square account cleanly â from exporting reports, canceling subscriptions, and unlinking bank accounts, to full deactivation and optional data deletion.
Letâs walk through it step by step.
Why You Might Want to Delete Square
Letâs be real. Squareâs great for getting started.
I used it when I opened my first in-person pop-up with print-on-demand gear.
Itâs plug-and-play, easy to get going, and the hardware works fine. But over time, it starts feeling⊠limited.
You might want out because:
- Your retail business is shutting down
- You're switching to a better POS like Shopify or Lightspeed
- Youâre tired of paying monthly fees for stuff youâre not using
- You sold the business and want to clear your data
- Squareâs not fitting your workflow anymore
Whatever the reason â if youâre done, hereâs how to do it properly.
Iâve had clients go through this when their business model changed â maybe they moved from brick-and-mortar to fully online, or they just started using tools that played nicer with Shopify.
In a lot of cases, it wasnât even about Square being âbad,â it just stopped being the right tool for the job. If your POS setup doesnât work with your business model, it works against it.
Thereâs also the issue of recurring costs. Square's subscriptions can stack up fast, especially if youâre not actively using all the features.
Between loyalty programs, marketing tools, and payroll, you could be paying hundreds each month just to keep the lights on. Thatâs money better spent elsewhere if youâve moved on.
Step 1: Export Everything You Might Need Later
This is the one mistake I see retail owners make again and again.
They hit âdeactivateâ before pulling their records â then six months later when theyâre doing taxes, theyâre screwed.
What to download before you do anything:
- Sales reports (monthly/quarterly/yearly)
- Transaction history
- Customer data
- Inventory lists
- Employee timecards (if you used Square Team Management)
How to do it:
- Log in to your Square Dashboard
- Head to Reports > Sales Summary
- Choose your date range
- Export as CSV
- Save that stuff somewhere safe
Do the same for customers, inventory, anything you think youâll need.
Because once you close it â itâs gone.
It sounds obvious, but when youâre in clean-up mode, youâre not thinking long-term. Iâve seen shop owners panic at audit time because they didnât have backup records from Square.
You want to export not just what you need now, but what you might need later â better safe than scrambling.
I always recommend storing these files in multiple places â your local hard drive, Google Drive, even Dropbox.
Treat it like closing out a tax year. If you ever need to prove revenue, deal with a refund request, or hand over records to a buyer or accountant, youâll be glad you kept everything tidy.
Step 2: Cancel All Subscriptions First
This is where people get stuck.
Even if you close your Square account, theyâll keep charging your card if youâve got active subscriptions.
That includes:
- Square for Retail
- Square Appointments
- Square Payroll
- Square Online
- Team Plus
- Marketing or Loyalty plans
How to cancel:
- Go to your Square Dashboard
- Click on Account & Settings > Subscriptions
- Find each one youâre using
- Hit Cancel
Pro tip: Do this before you deactivate the account â or it might not process correctly.
The tricky thing here is that Square doesnât bundle your subscriptions. Each service needs to be canceled individually.
Just closing your main account doesnât auto-cancel everything tied to it. Thatâs how people end up with surprise charges weeks later.
Make sure you check your billing history too. If anything looks off â like charges for tools you forgot you signed up for â contact support right away. Better to wrap it all up cleanly now than chase down refunds later.
Step 3: Remove Any Linked Hardware or Bank Accounts
If youâve got a physical Square Reader or Square Register, itâs not tied to your identity â but itâs still smart to reset everything.
And if youâve linked your bank account, swap it out with something neutral before deactivation. Just in case.
Steps:
- Go to Settings > Hardware â unlink any devices
- Go to Settings > Bank Accounts â remove or replace the linked account
Removing hardware ties and payment info protects you long-term. Iâve heard of people selling or giving away their old Square Readers without logging them out first.
You donât want someone else transacting under your old business name or messing up your tax records.
Same goes for your bank. If you forget to unlink it, Square could still attempt to bill you or issue a refund â even if your account is closed.
Best case, itâs an annoyance. Worst case, youâre chasing down unexpected bank activity. Pull the plug cleanly.
Step 4: Deactivate the Account from the Browser (Not the App)
You canât delete your Square account through the app.
Youâll need to do it from the desktop browser.
Hereâs how:
- Go to your Square Account Dashboard
- Click Account & Settings > Business Information
- Scroll to the bottom
- Click Deactivate Account
- Choose your reason
- Confirm
Thatâs it. Youâll get an email confirming the shutdown.
â ïž Heads up: If you're the account owner, you're the only one who can do this. Not your staff or admins.
Even if someone else helps you run the business, only the person who originally created the Square account can deactivate it.
This is a security feature â and itâs non-negotiable. So if youâve sold your store or handed it off to a partner, youâll need to handle this step yourself or officially transfer account ownership first.
Once deactivated, you canât reverse it. Square doesnât let you âpauseâ or âfreezeâ accounts â itâs all or nothing. So be absolutely sure youâve done the previous steps first, especially the data exports.
What Happens After You Close It
Hereâs what to expect after your account is gone:
- You wonât be able to log in â so make sure youâve saved your data
- No one else can access your info â itâs locked
- Your Square hardware still works â it just wonât be connected to anything
- Receipts + transaction records are still sent to your customers if they got emails/SMS at time of sale
- Square holds some data for up to 7 years for legal reasons
If you reopen the same business later, youâll need to make a new account from scratch.
One thing people donât always expect â even if you shut down, Squareâs systems still remember certain things like tax IDs or merchant info.
So if you ever open another Square account with the same email or EIN, you might hit some duplicate flagging. Itâs rare, but it happens.
Also, if youâre using Square hardware, you can sell it, donate it, or reuse it with a new account. Just be sure to factory reset it before handing it off.
You donât want your old business name showing up on someone elseâs receipt.
Thinking About Switching POS Systems?
If youâre not just shutting down â but moving to a better platform â good move.
Squareâs great for day one.
But when you need more features, deeper control, or better eCommerce integration⊠it hits its limits.
Hereâs what I recommend checking out:
- Shopify POS â best for omnichannel stores with online + in-person selling
- Lightspeed Retail â solid if you have a larger store or lots of SKUs
- Clover POS â good middle ground, and great hardware options
- SumUp â cheaper alternative if you want to go lightweight
Switching takes a bit of setup, but itâs worth it if youâre scaling or simplifying.
Before switching, think about what you need your POS to actually do. Are you managing multiple SKUs? Do you need deeper analytics?
Are you doing a lot of online sales alongside in-store? The right system can save you hours a week â not just at checkout, but with inventory, fulfillment, and reporting.
If youâre in the print-on-demand space like me, Shopify is a killer option. You can sync it with Printful or Gelato, manage orders seamlessly, and sell both online and in-store without having to duct-tape your tools together.
Bonus Tip: Donât Forget Team Access
Before deleting, make sure your employees or partners are out of the system.
You donât want anyone poking around or messing with settings after youâve shut things down.
Go to:
- Team > Permissions
- Remove access or delete users one by one
Iâve seen team members accidentally log in months later and wonder why things arenât working â or worse, make changes thinking the account is still active. Clean it out before shutting down.
If your business is changing hands, Square does let you transfer ownership. That way, the new owner can keep the sales history, logins, and account structure â without you needing to delete anything.
But if youâre walking away entirely, itâs best to wipe your tracks and lock it down.
FAQs About Deleting Your Square Account
Can I delete my Square account from the app?
Nope. You have to do it from a desktop browser.
Will I lose all my sales data?
Yes, once the account is deactivated â unless you exported it before deleting.
Do I get a refund on subscriptions I cancel?
Square does not usually refund the remaining balance of a subscription term â but you can ask via Square support.
Can I reactivate later?
No. Once itâs deleted, itâs gone. Youâll need to make a new account from scratch.
Is Square still charging me after I deleted?
If you didnât cancel subscriptions before deactivation, they might still charge your card. Youâll need to contact support to fix that.
Final Word
If youâre ready to delete your Square account, donât rush it.
Iâve helped enough retail folks mess this up to know â itâs not just a click-and-done situation.
Cancel your subscriptions. Export your data. Clean your settings. Then shut it down.
Thatâs how you make sure itâs clean, safe, and future-you doesnât have a panic moment when tax season rolls around.
Good luck out there.
And if youâre making moves with print-on-demand or scaling your POS setup â keep things tight. Your backend matters.
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