Do mobile paywalls and web pricing pages actually differ for the same product?
In our corpora they differ structurally, and you almost never get to compare the same product's two surfaces: only 168 of 807 mobile apps (21%) also appear in the 670-site web census [1][2]. Mobile monetizes through dedicated paywall screens (1,297 canonical paywalls) while web monetizes through pricing pages (183 labeled), with a web 'paywall' essentially non-existent (38 screens) [3]. Treat them as two different design problems, not one screen ported across platforms.
Only 168 of 807 mobile apps (21%) also appear in the web screen census, so same-product mobile-vs-web comparisons are rare — Lazyweb Research, July 2026.
Finding: two surfaces, two different corpora
The mobile and web corpora are built differently and barely overlap. Mobile is a flow graph of 23,407 canonical screens across 809 companies; web is a flat census of 11,753 labeled screens across 670 sites [4]. Only 168 companies appear in both [1][2].
| Surface | Mobile | Web |
|---|---|---|
| Dedicated paywall screens | 1,297 | 38 |
| Pricing page screens | n/a | 183 |
The implication is blunt: mobile apps lean on a purpose-built paywall screen, web products lean on a pricing page, and the web 'paywall' (38 screens) is too thin to design against [3].
How to apply this
Do not assume your web pricing page's plan-comparison layout should be reused as a mobile paywall, or vice versa. The mobile paywall is a single-decision, momentum-driven screen; the web pricing page is a multi-tier evaluation surface (see the CTA and tier-count contrasts on the related pages). If you want a genuine same-product comparison, confirm your product is one of the 168 in both corpora before drawing conclusions [1].
Caveats
These are two distinct corpora that mostly cover different companies; never quote a combined company count as if one product spanned both. Web 'paywall' at 38 rows is too small to slice [3]. All comparisons here are corpus-level pattern contrasts, not matched-product measurements.
The numbers
| Stat | Computed from |
|---|---|
| 168 of 807 mobile apps (21%) also in web census | cross_corpus_company_overlap: in_both 168 / mobile_companies 807 |
| 670 web sites in the labeled-screen census | cross_corpus_company_overlap: web_companies 670 |
| 1,297 mobile paywall screens vs 183 web pricing vs 38 web paywall | paywall_vs_pricing_page_surface_count |
| 23,407 mobile canonical screens (809 cos) vs 11,753 web labeled screens (670 sites) | corpus_structure_contrast |
Sources & citations
- [1] Lazyweb Research analysis of 807 mobile apps and 670 web sites (cross-corpus company overlap), July 2026. 168 companies appear in both the mobile screenshot corpus and the web labeled-screen corpus. ↩
- [2] Lazyweb Research analysis of 670 web sites (web labeled-screen census), July 2026. Web corpus is a flat labeled-screen census across 670 sites. ↩
- [3] Lazyweb Research analysis of 1,518 monetization screens (mobile paywalls + web pricing/paywall), July 2026. 1,297 mobile paywall canonical screens, 183 web pricing screens, 38 web paywall screens. ↩
- [4] Lazyweb Research analysis of 35,160 product screens (23,407 mobile + 11,753 web), July 2026. Mobile is a flow graph; web is a flat census with no flow data. ↩
Source: Lazyweb Research — proprietary analysis of real, in-market app screens. Cite as Lazyweb Research, 2026-07-07.