Is a 7-day free trial the default for mobile paywalls?

Yes — 7-day is the most-advertised trial length by a wide margin: 148 mentions (57.4% of the 258 length-naming CTAs) from 42 distinct companies, two-thirds of all length-advertising companies.[1][2] No other single length comes close on a company basis. If you advertise one trial length, 7 days is the safe, evidence-backed default.

42 of 63 length-advertising companies use a 7-day trial — the clear default — Lazyweb Research, July 2026.

Lazyweb Research · n=258 · Published 2026-07-07

paywalltrialsmonetizationsaasux-patterns

The finding

7-day (including '1-week') is named in 148 of the 258 length-advertising primary CTAs — 57.4% of them, and 7.8% of all 1,886 primary CTAs.[1] Company-deduped, 42 of the 63 companies that advertise any trial length use 7-day, versus 12 for 14-day, 9 for 3-day, and 7 for 30-day.[2]

LengthCompaniesShare of 63 length-advertisers
7-day4267%
14-day1219%
3-day914%
30-day711% (upper bound)

Named examples: PictureThis ('Try 7 days free, then $39.99/year'), Yousician ('Try free for 7 days'), Calm ('Try another 7 days for free').[1]

How to apply it

7-day is the default because it balances two forces: long enough for a user to build a light habit or see recurring value, short enough that the billing decision arrives before novelty fades. It is also the only length with a citable sample across multiple verticals — in Health & Fitness (7-day dominates at 25 mentions) and Music (7-day is the only common length, 14 mentions), it is effectively the sole option.[3]

Deviate from 7-day only for a reason: shorter (3-day) for instant-utility apps forcing a fast decision, longer (14-day) for tools that need setup time. Absent such a reason, 7 days is the choice that matches the largest cohort of apps.

Caveats

7-day is detected via (7|seven)[- ]day|1[- ]week regex over button plus adjacent copy, so trials shown only on plan cards are missed. The 57.4% is a share of the 258 length-naming CTAs, not of all paywalls — most primary CTAs (86.3%) name no length at all.[1] Cross-vertical dominance figures use per-vertical samples that clear n=70. July 2026 pull.

The numbers

StatComputed from
7-day 148 mentions (57.4% of 258; 7.8% of 1,886)trial_length_7day, trial_length_any_day_share
42 of 63 length-advertising companies use 7-daytrial_length_companies
Health & Fitness 7-day dominates (25); Music 7-day only common length (14)trial_led_by_category_health_fitness, trial_led_by_category_music
Methodology. Universe: 258 length-naming primary CTAs (of 1,886) across ~800 tracked apps, July 2026. 7-day detected by regex over button plus adjacent copy; company-deduped counts used for prevalence. Per-vertical cuts require n>=70.

Sources & citations

  1. [1] Lazyweb Research analysis of 258 length-naming primary CTAs (~800 tracked apps), July 2026. 7-day/1-week regex over button plus adjacent copy; named examples from extracted copy.
  2. [2] Lazyweb Research analysis of 63 length-advertising companies (~800 tracked apps), July 2026. Company-deduped length counts.
  3. [3] Lazyweb Research analysis of Health & Fitness (n=340) and Music (n=128) primary CTAs, July 2026. Per-vertical length dominance; only verticals clearing n=70 shown.

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

Related questions

Explore the underlying screens, flows, and A/B tests inside Lazyweb. More research