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The Free Trial Is Now 14 Days

Wardrowbe Team3 min read
Minimal poster with a large number 14, the words Days Free Trial underneath, and a faint diagonal Wardrowbe watermark

Short version: the Wardrowbe Cloud trial went from 7 days to 14. No credit card either way, same as before. This post is about why, because "we doubled it" on its own doesn't tell you anything useful.

Why 7 Days Wasn't Enough

The honest reason is the math didn't work out in most people's favor. Suggestions start feeling personal around 20-30 items, and getting there realistically takes a few days of adding things as you go, not all at once. By the time the wardrobe was big enough for the AI to actually know what it was working with, there were maybe two or three days left to evaluate whether the daily suggestion was any good. That's not enough runway to judge a habit. You can't tell if a morning notification is going to stick after using it twice.

I watched this pattern in the trial nudge data for a while before deciding it was worth fixing. People who converted almost always had a longer runway, either because they added items fast early on or because they came back to it after the 7 days had technically ended (the trial pauses rather than auto-charging without a payment method, so there was already some slack built in). Fourteen days just makes that slack the default instead of an accident.

If You're Already Mid-Trial

This doesn't retroactively extend a trial that's already running. If you signed up before this changed, your trial ends on the date it originally said. New signups from now on get the full 14 days. I know that's a slightly annoying answer if you're three days from your original trial ending, but I'd rather say that plainly than let people assume it applies automatically and get surprised.

The First Week Still Matters

The day-by-day trial guide I wrote earlier is still the right way to spend the first week: add items as you go, get your first suggestion around day 3, try pairings, set up morning notifications by day 6 or 7. None of that changes. What changes is what happens after. Instead of the trial ending right when the habit is starting to form, you get a second week to actually live with it. Check analytics with more real data behind it. See if the morning notification becomes something you rely on or something you dismiss. That's a much fairer test than judging an app on its first three days.

If you want the fuller version of that arc, your first week with Wardrowbe covers what week two typically looks like once the foundation is in place, and the guided setup walkthrough covers the onboarding nudges you'll see along the way.

Nothing Else About Pricing Changed

PlanPriceTrial
Monthly$10/month14 days
Yearly$9/month ($108 billed yearly)14 days
Self-hostedFree, foreverNo trial needed

Same plans, same prices, just more time to decide before either one applies. If cloud still isn't the right fit after two weeks, self-hosting is free and runs the identical app on your own hardware. Cloud vs self-hosted is the honest breakdown if you're weighing that decision.

Get Started

Start the 14-day trial — no credit card, cancel any time before it ends and you won't be charged. Or self-host from GitHub if you'd rather run it yourself from day one. See pricing for the full plan breakdown, or check the FAQ if you have questions before signing up.

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