What percent of settings screens surface the upgrade entry point?

Among the 321 tracked apps that have a captured settings/account/profile screen, 35% (112) surface an upgrade, premium, subscribe, or unlock entry point on that surface.[3] That makes settings one of the highest-coverage single placements for an always-available upsell — nearly matching the 34% of all apps that run an upgrade banner anywhere.[1][3] On web, settings is also the most-labeled in-product surface (1,351 screens).[4]

35% of tracked apps with a settings screen (112/321) put an upgrade entry point on it — Lazyweb Research, July 2026.

Lazyweb Research · n=321 · Published 2026-07-07

upsellmonetizationsaasux-patternsmobileweb

Finding

Of 321 apps with a canonical settings/account/profile screen, 112 also carry a tag for an upgrade/premium/go-pro/subscribe/plus/upsell/unlock entry on that surface — 35%.[3] This is a per-surface denominator: it answers 'when an app has settings, how often does it monetize it', not 'what share of all apps'. For comparison, an upgrade banner appears anywhere in-product in 34% of all 809 apps.[1]

DenominatorWith upgrade entryShare
Apps with a settings screen (321)11235%

How to apply

Settings is a cheap, durable upsell slot: it's always reachable, carries no interruption cost, and a third of apps that have it already use it. Put a persistent 'Upgrade' / 'Go Pro' row near the top of account settings as a baseline, then reserve contextual gates for the moment of intent. On web the same logic holds — settings (1,351 screens) and dashboard (1,088) are the two largest in-product surfaces, so an upgrade entry there gets broad exposure.[4]

Caveats

The 321 denominator is apps with a captured settings-type screen, not all 809 apps — do not restate it as 35% of the whole corpus.[3] The upgrade-entry match is a tag-based lower bound.[3] Web and mobile are distinct universes; the 1,351 web settings screens come from the separate 11,753-screen web corpus and should not be mixed with the mobile app counts.[4]

The numbers

StatComputed from
35% (112/321)upgrade_entry_in_settings: 112/321
34% (271/809)upgrade_banner_prompt_prevalence: 271/809
1,351 web settings screensweb_in_product_screens sql note: Settings=1,351
1,088 web dashboard screensweb_in_product_screens sql note: dashboard=1,088
Methodology. Universe: 321 tracked apps with a canonical settings/account/profile screen (of 809), plus the distinct 11,753-screen web corpus. Method: tag-based upgrade-entry detection deduped by company, July 2026. Caveat: per-surface denominator; tag matches are a lower bound.

Sources & citations

  1. [3] Lazyweb Research analysis of 23,407 canonical mobile screens (tracked app corpus), July 2026. Canonical-screen category counts; is_paywall is NULL on 21,824/23,407 rows so gating is reported as app-count prevalence or absolute screen counts, never as a share of all screens.
  2. [1] Lazyweb Research analysis of 809 apps (tracked mobile app corpus with screenshots), July 2026. Prevalence deduped by COUNT(DISTINCT company_name) over 44,873 tagged screenshots; tag patterns are LLM synonym phrases (tightened after spot-checking) so every stat is a lower bound.
  3. [4] Lazyweb Research analysis of 11,753 labeled desktop web product screens (distinct web corpus), July 2026. Web (sites_screen_labels) and mobile (screenshots) are distinct universes and largely different companies; never mix the 809-app denominator with the 11,753 web-screen denominator.

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