'Continue' vs 'Start Free Trial': Which Paywall CTA Do Top Apps Actually Use?

Across 222 companies with a labeled primary paywall CTA, 103 (46.4%) lead with a trial-promise button (try/start + free/trial) versus 69 (31.1%) that lead with a 'Continue'-style button [1]. So more apps choose a trial CTA at the company level — but 'Continue' is still the most-repeated single string (350 CTAs) [2]. The two strategies split the market roughly in half; neither is a clear majority.

Trial-led paywall CTAs are used by 103 of 222 companies (46.4%) vs 69 (31.1%) leading with 'Continue' — Lazyweb Research, 1,886 primary CTAs, July 2026.

Lazyweb Research · n=1886 · Published 2026-07-07

paywalltrialsmonetizationux-patternsexperiments

The head-to-head

Grouping by intent across the 1,886 primary CTAs: the trial-led family (buttons starting with try/start and mentioning free or trial) is 527 CTAs from 103 companies, while the continue-led family (any 'continue…' variant) is 397 CTAs from 69 companies [1][3]. On CTA count, trial-led (27.9% of primary CTAs) beats continue-led (21.1%); on company adoption, 46.4% vs 31.1% [1][3]. Trial wins both, but not by a landslide.

Two philosophies, side by side

StrategyPrimary CTAsShare of primaryCompaniesCompany share
Trial-led (try/start + free/trial)52727.9%10346.4%
Continue-led (any 'continue…')39721.1%6931.1%
Exact bare 'continue'35018.6%6629.7%

'Continue' defers the ask: the money and plan choice live in the cards, the button just advances. 'Start Free Trial' front-loads the offer in the button itself. Both patterns are mainstream [1][2][3].

How to choose

If your plan cards already make the trial and price obvious, 'Continue' keeps the button friction-free — its 29.7% company adoption shows it reads as a safe, low-anxiety default [2]. If the trial is your strongest lever and cards are dense, put the promise in the button ('Start Free Trial', 84 CTAs / 22 companies; 'Try for Free', 74 / 16) [4]. This benchmark tells you what is common, not what converts for your funnel — treat it as a prior for an A/B test, not a verdict.

Caveats

Denominator is the 222 companies (or 1,886 primary CTAs) with a labeled primary CTA; 39% of all 4,406 CTAs are role-unknown and excluded [5]. Family membership is regex-based on lowercased text, so borderline phrasings ('try premium', 'start now' without 'free') land outside both families and are not double-counted.

The numbers

StatComputed from
trial-led 527 CTAs (27.9%), 103 companies (46.4% of 222)statpack trial_led_primary + continue_vs_trial_company_level
exact bare 'continue' = 350 CTAs (18.6% of 1886), 66 companies (29.7%)statpack top_primary_cta_overall + exact_continue_companies
continue-led 397 CTAs (21.1%), 69 companies (31.1%)statpack continue_led_primary + continue_vs_trial_company_level
start free trial 84 CTAs/22 cos; try for free 74/16statpack primary_leaderboard_top10
1,727 of 4,406 CTAs role-unknown (39%)statpack role_distribution
Methodology. Universe: 1,886 role-labeled primary paywall CTAs from ~800 tracked mobile apps, July 2026. Trial-led = text matching ^(try|start).*(free|trial); continue-led = text LIKE 'continue%'. Caveat: 39% of CTAs are role-unknown and excluded from role stats.

Sources & citations

  1. [1] Lazyweb Research analysis of 1,886 primary paywall CTAs (from ~800 tracked mobile apps), July 2026. Intent families defined by regex on lower(trim(cta_text)); company counts via COUNT(DISTINCT).
  2. [2] Lazyweb Research analysis of 222 companies with a labeled primary paywall CTA, July 2026. Company-level adoption of continue-led vs trial-led primary CTAs.

Source: Lazyweb Research — proprietary analysis of real, in-market app screens. Cite as Lazyweb Research, 2026-07-07.

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