Do paywalls say 'no payment due now' or 'you won't be charged'?
Almost never in the copy near the button. Only 7 paywall screens across 5 companies carry a 'no payment now / no charge / won't be charged' reassurance in the extracted CTA-adjacent copy [1]. Because it is so rare, it should be read as an absolute count with named examples — not a percentage. Flo, PictureThis and Translate Now are among the handful that use it [1].
Only 7 paywall screens across 5 companies carry a 'no payment now / no charge' line near the CTA — July 2026.
The finding: 'no payment now' is vanishingly rare near the CTA
The 'no charge yet' family — patterns like *no payment now/due*, *no charge*, *won't be charged*, *pay nothing*, *$0 today/due*, *due today* — surfaced in just 7 of 2,708 paywall screens, and only 3 primary CTA rows, across 5 companies [1]. That is too sparse to express as a rate; treat it as a named-example finding.
Contrast with the adjacent reassurance phrase 'cancel anytime,' which is an order of magnitude more common (102 screens, 40 companies) [2]. When apps reassure at all near the button, they reach for 'cancel anytime' far more than 'no payment now.'
Who uses it, and how
The examples show the phrase doing a specific job — killing the fear of an immediate charge when a trial starts:
- Flo — "Continue" under "No payment now. Cancel anytime." (note the stacking with cancel-anytime) [3]
- PictureThis — "Continue" with "Try plant ID free for 7 days $29.99/year — No charge if canceled before 7-day free trial" [3]
Both pair the reassurance with a trial-led offer, and Flo stacks both reassurance phrases together [3].
How to apply this
If your trial charges a card up front (or users believe it does), an explicit 'no payment now' or 'no charge until [date]' line directly answers the objection — and almost nobody in the corpus does it near the button, so it is a differentiator rather than a cliché [1]. The strongest version, per PictureThis, is specific: "No charge if canceled before your 7-day free trial" ties the reassurance to the exact trial window [3]. Because the pattern is so rare, there's no benchmark 'win' to cite — ship it as a hypothesis on trial-led paywalls and measure trial-start rate. Stack it with 'cancel anytime' the way Flo does if fear-of-lock-in is also present [3].
Caveats
This is the sparsest signal in the family — 3 primary rows, 7 screens, 5 companies — and the extraction only reads copy adjacent to a CTA, so a 'no charge' line buried in fine print elsewhere on the screen would be missed [4]. Do not build a percentage around it; publish absolute counts and named examples only [1]. All screen counts use the 2,708 distinct paywall screenshots.
The numbers
| Stat | Computed from |
|---|---|
| 7 screens / 5 companies with 'no payment now' family | no_payment_now_screens: 7 screens, 5 companies (flo, picturethis, translate-now +2) |
| 'Cancel anytime': 102 screens / 40 companies | cancel_anytime_screens 102/2708; cancel_anytime_companies 40/252 |
| Flo, PictureThis 'no payment now' examples | qualitative no payment due now entries |
| 3 primary CTA rows carry the phrase | smallSampleWarnings: 3 primary rows, 7 screens, 5 companies |
Sources & citations
- [1] Lazyweb Research analysis of 2,708 paywall screenshots (~800 tracked apps), July 2026. Regex for no payment/no charge/won't be charged/pay nothing/$0 today/due today per screenshot; 7 screens, 5 companies, 3 primary rows. ↩
- [2] Lazyweb Research analysis of 2,708 paywall screenshots and 252 companies (~800 tracked apps), July 2026. Comparison phrase 'cancel anytime' across the same extraction. ↩
Source: Lazyweb Research — proprietary analysis of real, in-market app screens. Cite as Lazyweb Research, 2026-07-07.