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Stan Store Free Trial: What You Get in 14 Days (2026)

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Stan Store gives you 14 days free. Full access to the plan you choose. No Stan Store platform fee — Stripe’s standard processing rate still applies to any sales during the trial. No permanent free tier after it ends. The question that matters is not whether to use the trial — you should. The question is which plan to trial and what to actually test in those 14 days to make the decision confidently.

Stan Store mobile storefront showing product cards, a booking block, and an email opt-in stacked on one vertical page

What the Stan Store Free Trial Actually Is

Stan Store offers a 14-day free trial on both the Creator plan ($29/month) and Creator Pro ($99/month). During the trial you get full access to every feature on that plan — storefront, checkout, lead capture, and email tools where applicable. Stan Store does not charge a platform transaction fee — Stripe’s standard processing rate (2.9% + $0.30 per sale) applies to all sales including during the trial. After 14 days, you must enter a paid plan or cancel. There is no reduced-feature free tier that continues after the trial, per stan.store.

The trial is plan-specific. If you start the Creator trial, you test Creator features. If you start the Creator Pro trial, you get access to Stan Store’s built-in email marketing tools, post-purchase automations, and the advanced analytics that are not included on Creator.

That choice matters before you sign up. Most creators default to the cheaper plan because they are nervous about spending $99 before they know if the tool works for them. That logic makes sense, but it means they only ever test the less capable version of the product. If the feature you actually need to evaluate — email sequences, automation flows, post-purchase follow-up — lives exclusively on Creator Pro, trialing Creator tells you nothing useful.

One more thing worth knowing: some affiliate referral links extend the trial beyond 14 days. Smart Passive Income, among others, has published links that unlock a 30-day trial, per smartpassiveincome.com. If you find one of these links before signing up, use it. More time to test is always the better outcome.

Does the Trial Let You Actually Test Lead Capture?

Lead capture is the first stage where creator funnels leak, and it is the one you can test fully in a 14-day window.

During the trial, you can set up a live email opt-in block on your Stan Store page, connect a lead magnet, and run actual traffic to it. If you have an Instagram or TikTok audience, post your stan.store link and see what happens. Real subscribers. Real delivery confirmation emails. Real data on whether your lead magnet offer resonates with your audience.

On the Creator plan, those subscribers land in your Stan Store contacts list. Stan Store sends the lead magnet delivery email automatically. What it cannot do natively is build a multi-email welcome sequence — you need to connect ConvertKit, Brevo, or MailerLite through the integrations panel and run the sequence from there. That integration is free to set up during the trial and worth doing early if email nurture is a meaningful part of your funnel.

On Creator Pro, you get access to Stan Store’s built-in sequence builder. You can set up a 3-email welcome flow triggered by the opt-in, test the delivery, and see how it performs — all within the trial window.

What you will not know after 14 days is how your list performs over months. Long-term deliverability, open rate trends, and list health require time to measure. The trial lets you validate the mechanics. It does not let you validate the relationship-building arc.

Stan Store email opt-in block embedded on a storefront page with a lead magnet PDF download offer visible above the product listings

Can You Test Email Deliverability in 14 Days?

Email deliverability is the invisible leak most creators discover late. You can run a basic test in the trial window, but it has limits.

What you can test: set up a welcome email or broadcast in Stan Store, send it to a small seed list (your own email addresses across Gmail, Outlook, and Apple Mail), and check where the message lands. Inbox, promotions tab, or spam. That tells you where Stan Store’s infrastructure places cold sends.

What the trial cannot tell you: whether deliverability holds at scale and over time. Stan Store’s marketing emails run on shared sending infrastructure — multiple creators on the same sending pool. How that pool performs at 200 subscribers is not how it performs at 2,000. You cannot simulate six months of list activity in 14 days.

The practical workaround: if you plan to connect a dedicated email platform (ConvertKit, Brevo, MailerLite) for marketing sends rather than relying on Stan Store’s built-in tool, deliverability is largely that platform’s responsibility, not Stan Store’s. In that setup, Stan Store handles capture and transactional email. The external platform handles everything else. Deliverability in that configuration is easier to evaluate because those platforms publish their domain authentication setup and deliverability practices openly.

If your plan is to run everything inside Stan Store on Creator Pro, test the broadcast send to your seed addresses early in the trial. Do not wait until day 13 to discover there is a problem.

Can You Evaluate Offer Clarity During the Trial?

Yes — and this is one of the most useful things the trial actually lets you do.

Stan Store’s storefront layout is opinionated: one vertical column, product cards with a title, image, short description, price, and a buy button. What you see in the editor is very close to what a mobile visitor sees when they tap your bio link. There are no surprises in the gap between design view and published view.

During the trial, set up your actual offer — not a placeholder. Write the real product description. Use the real price. Upload a real product image. Share the link with five people who match your audience. Do they understand what you are selling in five seconds? Do they ask for more information before they will buy? Do they hit the buy button without hesitation?

That feedback tells you something the trial analytics cannot. Offer card performance data only accumulates if you send real traffic. Most creators use the trial to configure the tool and then wait until they are “ready” before promoting. That approach wastes the window. The trial is most valuable when you treat it as a live experiment, not a sandbox.

The honest constraint: Stan Store’s card format does not support long-form sales copy. If your offer needs a 1,500-word page to convert cold traffic — a high-ticket coaching program, a multi-module course, an offer that requires overcoming real purchase hesitation — the trial will surface that limit quickly. Short cards work for warm social audiences who already trust you. They do not substitute for a sales page when you are selling to cold traffic arriving from search or paid ads.

Can You Test Checkout During the Trial?

Checkout is one of the clearest things to evaluate during the trial because Stan Store makes it fast to test.

During the trial period, you can complete a real purchase on your own storefront. Go through the full checkout flow yourself — ideally on mobile, since that is the majority of Stan Store’s use case. Enter your card details (or use a test payment mode if available), complete the transaction, and confirm what the post-purchase experience looks like from the buyer’s side.

What to look for: Does the checkout stay inside the Stan Store page without redirecting to a separate Stripe window? How many taps does it take between “I want this” and “payment confirmed”? Does the confirmation email arrive within two minutes? Is the product download link functional?

Both Creator and Creator Pro include the same checkout experience. Neither plan charges additional platform transaction fees beyond Stripe’s standard rate of 2.9% + $0.30 per sale, per Stripe’s published pricing. The mobile-first one-screen checkout is the same on both tiers.

One thing to check: Apple Pay and Google Pay availability. These one-tap payment methods reduce checkout friction significantly on mobile. If your buyers are predominantly mobile users, verify these options work in your Stan Store checkout during the trial rather than assuming.

What About Post-Purchase Follow-Up?

Post-purchase follow-up is the stage the 14-day window tests least reliably — and the one most creators underestimate.

The first purchase confirmation and product delivery land immediately. Stan Store handles those on both plans. Where the gap shows is in what happens next: the day-3 implementation tip, the day-7 check-in, the day-14 upsell, the day-30 review request. These sequences do not fire in real time during a 14-day trial unless you specifically set them up and push simulated purchases through.

On Creator Pro, you can configure a post-purchase sequence and test each step manually using your own email address as the buyer. That validates the mechanics — the emails trigger, the timing works, the links resolve correctly. It does not tell you how buyers actually respond to the content or whether the sequence drives repeat purchases.

If post-purchase automation is the primary reason you are considering Creator Pro, set it up in week one. Do not leave it to week two. You want time to discover problems and iterate, not just confirm the setup works at the end of the trial.

On the Creator plan, post-purchase automation is not available natively. If you have an external email tool, you can connect the purchase event as a trigger and run the sequence from there. That integration is worth setting up during the trial even if you plan to stay on Creator — it is the most impactful post-purchase improvement available at that price point.

Stan Store Creator Pro post-purchase automation builder showing a three-step email sequence with day-one welcome, day-three check-in, and day-seven review request steps

Stan Store Plan Comparison

Both plans are available on the 14-day free trial. Here is what each tier includes and the limit that matters most for your evaluation.

PlanPriceBest ForKey Limit
Creator$29/month ($25/month billed annually)First digital product, Instagram or TikTok creators selling $20–$200 offersNo built-in email sequences or automations — needs external email tool
Creator Pro$99/month ($79/month billed annually)Creators past $1K/month who want storefront, capture, and email in one platformEmail tool less capable than dedicated platforms at scale

Both plans include a 14-day free trial with full access to that plan’s features, per stan.store. Annual billing saves $48/year on Creator and $240/year on Creator Pro. After the trial, paid billing begins automatically unless you cancel before day 14. There is no permanent free tier.

Who Should Start the Stan Store Trial (and Which Plan to Choose)

Start the Creator trial ($29/month) if:

  • You are selling one or two digital products, presets, templates, or coaching calls in the $20–$200 range
  • Your primary traffic is Instagram or TikTok followers who already know you
  • You already use ConvertKit, Brevo, or MailerLite for email sequences and are evaluating Stan Store for storefront and checkout only
  • You want to test whether mobile-first checkout from your bio link drives more sales than your current setup

Start the Creator Pro trial ($99/month) if:

  • You want to evaluate Stan Store’s email tool as a potential replacement for your current email platform
  • You need to test post-purchase automation sequences before committing
  • You are earning past $1K/month and consolidating tools is a real priority

Do not bother with the trial if:

  • You sell courses that require a full course player with module tracking and certificates — Stan Store is a storefront, not a course platform
  • Your traffic comes primarily from Google search or a newsletter rather than social bio taps — Stan Store is built for the Instagram-to-storefront path and will feel limited for search traffic
  • You need conditional email branching, deep list segmentation, or fine-grained deliverability controls — a dedicated tool handles this better regardless of Stan Store tier

The 14-day window is enough to validate the mechanics of Stan Store’s fit with your funnel. The caveat is that you have to run real traffic and real purchases during those 14 days. A trial where you configure everything and wait gives you zero signal. One where you share the link with your audience on day one gives you meaningful purchase data before the trial ends.

FunnelForOne diagnostic framework showing which Stan Store plan to trial based on funnel stage and creator type

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is the Stan Store free trial?

Stan Store offers a 14-day free trial on both the Creator ($29/month) and Creator Pro ($99/month) plans, per stan.store. Some affiliate referral links extend the trial to 30 days. After the trial period, paid billing begins automatically unless you cancel before the end of the trial.

Is there a permanent free plan on Stan Store?

No. Stan Store does not offer a permanent free tier. The 14-day trial gives you full access to the plan you choose. After 14 days, you must enter a paid plan or cancel your account. There is no reduced-feature version that continues after the trial ends.

Do you need a credit card to start the Stan Store trial?

Stan Store requires payment information to begin the trial. Your card is not charged during the 14-day period, but billing begins automatically at the end of the trial unless you cancel before day 14. Set a reminder for day 12 or 13 so you are not caught by an automatic charge you did not intend.

Can you make real sales during the Stan Store trial?

Yes. Sales you process through Stan Store during the trial are real transactions. Buyers pay, you receive the funds, and Stan Store delivers the digital product automatically. Payment processing fees (Stripe’s standard rate of 2.9% + $0.30 per sale) apply to trial-period sales in the same way they apply after the trial.

Which Stan Store plan is better to trial?

Start with Creator Pro if you are evaluating Stan Store’s email features or post-purchase automation, since those are Creator Pro exclusives and you will not see them on a Creator trial. Start with Creator if you already have an external email tool and are only evaluating the storefront and checkout. Trialing the wrong plan means spending 14 days testing features you will not use — or missing the features you actually needed to evaluate.

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