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Porn Trial Cross Sales: How to Spot Them, Avoid Extra Charges, and Find Clean Checkout Trials

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12-year adult-site tester & Editor-in-Chief

Porn trial cross sales are optional add-on offers that appear during checkout and can activate extra memberships you never asked for. They’re the #1 reason people sign up for a $1 trial and end up with three charges totaling $80+. I’ve personally tested over 200 adult trial signups in the last 12 years, and I can tell you exactly which sites use aggressive cross-sales and which ones have clean checkouts.

Below you’ll find trials I’ve verified personally—no pre-ticked boxes, no hidden add-ons, no surprise charges beyond the advertised price. But first, here’s what porn trial cross sales actually look like, where they hide, and how to avoid them every time.

Porn trial cross sales example showing checkout page with pre-ticked add-on box and extra charges highlighted

Trials Without Cross Sales: Verified Clean Checkouts

These are trials I’ve personally tested in the last 60 days. Every checkout was clean—no cross-sale traps, no pre-selected upsells, no surprise charges beyond the advertised trial price. If it says “$1 for 2 days” or “$4.95 for a week,” that’s exactly what you’ll pay—nothing added at checkout, nothing hidden in fine print. I went through the entire signup flow myself and screenshotted the final payment page to confirm.

What porn trial cross sales are (and why they catch people out)

A porn trial cross sale is an optional add-on offer that appears during checkout—usually on the payment details page, right when you’re entering your card. In adult sites, that typically means:

  • An extra porn site (or multiple sites) bundled into your purchase
  • A “network upgrade” or “premium bundle” shown as a “special offer”
  • A separate trial for a partner brand that renews on a different date
  • A second membership you didn’t ask for, sometimes pre-selected by default

The problem: cross-sales can be genuinely good value if you want the extra access. But they’re often presented in ways that make them easy to miss—pre-ticked checkboxes, buried in fine print, or disguised as part of the main offer. That’s how a “$1 trial” turns into two or three charges you weren’t expecting.

I’ve seen people sign up for a $2.95 trial and walk away with three active memberships totaling $87.85. Here’s an actual example I tested last month: the main trial was $1 for 3 days, but there was a pre-ticked “bonus network access” checkbox for $29.95 buried under the card entry form, plus a second upsell on the confirmation screen for $39.95. Total damage if you clicked through without reading: $70.90 instead of $1.

Where porn trial cross sales hide (the 4 danger zones I check every time)

After testing hundreds of signups, I’ve learned exactly where to look. Cross-sales almost always appear in one of these spots:

  1. The payment details page itself (card entry screen)—the most common location. Look for extra checkboxes, product names, or pricing sections that weren’t on the previous page.
  2. A “special offer” or “upgrade” panel on the same page as the main trial price. Sometimes it’s labeled “recommended” or “most popular” and positioned to look like part of the main offer.
  3. The “one more step” or “confirm your order” screen that appears after you submit payment but before the final confirmation. This is where post-checkout upsells live.
  4. Small print or expandable “terms” sections at the bottom of checkout. I’ve seen sites list add-on products only in collapsed accordions that most people never open.

My rule: If I see more than one product name, more than one price, or any checkbox I didn’t specifically click myself, I stop and read everything on the screen before hitting submit.

How to spot a porn trial cross sale in 10 seconds (my actual checklist)

Before I click “Join” or “Submit Payment” on any trial, I scan for these signals:

  • Pre-ticked checkboxes mentioning “bonus”, “upgrade”, “bundle”, “partner access”, “special offer”, or “recommended”
  • Multiple product names in the order summary or confirmation text
  • More than one price listed (e.g., “today you pay $1.95” plus a second line showing $29.95 or “also included”)
  • Multiple renewal schedules (one product renews in 30 days, another in 14 days, etc.)
  • Different billing descriptors mentioned in the fine print—if you see two company names or two product names, that’s two subscriptions
  • Any language about “also activating” or “you’ll also receive” that references a site you didn’t come for

Quick test: If you can’t explain in one sentence exactly what you’re paying for today and what will renew (and when), don’t click submit yet. Read the page again.

What actually happens when you accept a porn trial cross sale

Cross-sales are processed through the same billing system that handles your main trial. When you check that box (or when it’s pre-checked and you don’t untick it), the system adds a second product to your purchase.

That second product can be:

  • Charged immediately as a separate line item (so you see two charges on your card the same day)
  • Bundled into the “today’s total” (one charge now, but it’s actually two subscriptions that will renew separately later)
  • A separate trial with its own renewal date and price (e.g., your main trial renews in 3 days at $39.95, the add-on renews in 7 days at $29.95)
  • A discounted intro rate that converts to a higher recurring fee (e.g., $4.95 today, then $49.95/month starting next billing cycle)

This is why people get surprise charges: you can end up with multiple active memberships, each renewing on different dates, sometimes billed under different company names on your statement. And canceling the main site doesn’t always cancel the add-ons—they can require separate cancellation steps.

Porn trial cross sale vs bundle vs upsell: what’s the difference?

  • Cross-sale: an additional product (often from a partner site or network) offered alongside your main purchase. Creates a separate subscription.
  • Bundle: multiple sites packaged together as one product. Usually one subscription, one renewal date, but higher price.
  • Upsell: a higher tier of the same site (HD vs 4K, downloads enabled, longer access period, etc.). Still one subscription.

All three can appear on the same checkout page. The critical question is: how many separate subscriptions am I activating? That’s what determines how many times you’ll be billed and how many cancellation steps you’ll need later.

My checkout routine (how I avoid porn trial cross sales every time)

I use this exact process for every trial signup, and it’s saved me from accidental add-ons more times than I can count:

  1. Pause on the payment page. Don’t rush the final step, even if you’re familiar with the site.
  2. Scan for checkboxes. Untick anything I didn’t explicitly decide to add. I assume all pre-ticked boxes are traps until proven otherwise.
  3. Confirm the “today” total. Does it match the trial price I saw on the landing page? If it’s higher, I figure out why before I submit.
  4. Check the renewal terms. What does it renew at, and when? Is there more than one renewal date or price mentioned?
  5. Screenshot the final checkout screen showing the exact price, product name, and what’s selected. This is my receipt if anything goes wrong.
  6. Save the confirmation email immediately. I search for it right after signup and flag it. If I get more than one email, that’s a red flag that I activated multiple subscriptions.

That screenshot is the single most valuable thing you can have if you need to dispute a charge or cancel something later. It shows exactly what was on the screen at the moment you paid.

“I’m not sure if I accepted a porn trial cross sale”—how to check in 5 minutes

If you’ve already signed up and you’re not sure whether you accepted an add-on, here’s how I verify:

1) Check your email for multiple receipts

Search your inbox for:

  • The site name you joined
  • Keywords: “welcome”, “receipt”, “invoice”, “membership confirmed”, “order confirmation”
  • The billing company name you saw at checkout (e.g., Epoch, CCBill, SegPay, Vendo)

Key indicator: If you received more than one welcome email or receipt, that usually means you activated more than one product. Check the “what you purchased” section in each email—if the product names are different, those are separate subscriptions.

2) Log in and check your account page

Most member areas have a “My Account”, “Billing”, “Subscriptions”, or “Membership” section. Look for:

  • How many “active subscriptions” are listed
  • Any “active add-ons”, “bonus access”, or “network memberships” sections
  • Multiple renewal dates or multiple product names under “your subscriptions”

3) Check your bank statement

Look for:

  • More than one charge on the same day (even if they’re small amounts)
  • Different merchant descriptors (company names) for charges that happened at the same time
  • A charge amount that’s higher than the advertised trial price

Example: You signed up for a $1.95 trial but see a $1.95 charge plus a $29.95 charge—that’s almost always a main trial + cross-sale.

4) Contact billing support (not the studio)

If you’re still unclear, reach out to the billing processor directly. They can tell you exactly what’s active on your account, what will renew and when, and how to cancel each item. In adult, the billing company (Epoch, CCBill, etc.) usually has better records than the site’s customer service.

“I got charged for something I didn’t want”—damage control steps

If you believe a cross-sale caused an unwanted charge, here’s the process I follow (and recommend to readers who contact me about this):

Step 1: Cancel immediately (stop the bleeding)

Cancel the unwanted subscription first, before you do anything else. This prevents future renewals while you sort out the current charge. Take a screenshot of the cancellation confirmation page and note the date/time.

Step 2: Gather your evidence

  • Confirmation emails (all of them)
  • Screenshots of the checkout page (if you took one)
  • Bank statement showing the charge(s)
  • Date and time you signed up
  • What you thought you were buying vs what actually got charged

Step 3: Contact billing support with specifics

Be direct and factual. Here’s a template that works:

I signed up for [site name] on [date] at [time]. I intended to purchase only the [trial offer details]. I’m seeing an additional charge for [amount] for

that I did not intentionally add. Please confirm what active subscriptions are currently on my account, provide details on what will renew and when, and cancel any add-ons I did not explicitly request. I’ve already canceled the unwanted subscription on [date] and have attached the confirmation screenshot.

Step 4: Request a refund review

Refund policies vary by processor and site, but most will review requests if you can show:

  • You canceled quickly (within hours or days of signup)
  • You haven’t used the add-on service
  • There’s evidence the cross-sale was unclear or pre-selected

I’ve seen successful refunds when people catch it fast and provide clear proof they didn’t intend the purchase. Keep your tone factual, not angry—support staff are more likely to help when you’re not accusing them of scamming you.

Step 5: Escalate to your card provider if you’re stuck

If billing support won’t help and you genuinely believe the charge was unauthorized or deceptive, contact your card issuer. They can explain dispute options and guide you through the chargeback process if appropriate. This should be a last resort—try to resolve it with the merchant first.

Common myths that get people burned

After 12 years of testing trials and fielding questions, these are the misconceptions I see most often:

  • “It’s one login, so it must be one subscription.”
    False. You can have one login that grants access to multiple sites, but each site can be a separate billing item with separate renewal terms. I’ve seen single logins tied to four different subscriptions.
  • “If it was on the page, it must have been obvious.”
    Not always. Checkout design can bury critical details, use confusing wording, or present add-ons in ways that look like they’re part of the main offer. Pre-ticked boxes exist specifically because they work—people miss them.
  • “Canceling the main site cancels everything.”
    Usually false. Cross-sales and add-ons are often separate subscriptions managed independently. You might need to cancel each one through different pages or different support contacts.
  • “Free trial means I won’t be charged anything.”
    Only if the trial is truly $0 and has no cross-sales. Many “$0 trials” still require a card for age verification and include pre-selected upsells. Always check what “free” actually means on the checkout page.

Why I only feature trials without porn trial cross sales

I personally test every trial offer before I list it on this site. That means I go through the entire signup flow—landing page, join page, payment screen, confirmation—and I screenshot every step. If a trial has cross-sales, I note it in the review. If the porn trial cross sales are deceptive (pre-ticked, buried, or disguised), I usually don’t list the trial at all.

The trials featured above passed my checkout test: one product, one price, no pre-selected add-ons. What you see on the landing page is what you get at checkout. If that changes, I update or remove the listing.

This is the core value I offer: I’ve already dealt with the checkout bullshit so you don’t have to. Every trial on this site is one I’ve signed up for myself, using my own card, and verified that the process matches the promise.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why did I get charged twice for a porn trial?

You were likely charged twice because a porn trial cross sale was added at checkout—either through a pre-ticked box you didn’t notice or an “upgrade” that looked like part of the main offer. Check your confirmation emails: if you received two welcome emails with different product names, that confirms two separate subscriptions were activated. Also check your bank statement for different charge amounts or merchant descriptors on the same day.

The trials listed above don’t use pre-ticked cross-sales, so you only get charged once for exactly what you selected.

What is Epoch (or CCBill/SegPay/Vendo) on my credit card statement?

Epoch, CCBill, SegPay, and Vendo are third-party billing processors used by most adult sites. They handle payments so the actual site name doesn’t appear on your statement. The charge descriptor shows the processor’s name instead of the porn site you joined. To confirm what the charge is for, search your email for receipts from that processor name plus the charge amount and date—the confirmation email will list what you purchased and which site it’s for.

How do I get a refund from a porn trial I didn’t want?

First, cancel the subscription immediately to stop future charges. Then contact the billing processor (not the studio) with your transaction date, charge amount, and explanation that you didn’t intend to purchase the add-on. Request a refund review and provide proof: screenshots of the checkout page if you have them, confirmation emails showing what you thought you were buying, and the cancellation confirmation. Refund approval depends on timing (faster is better), whether you used the service, and the processor’s policy. Be factual and polite—support staff respond better to clear evidence than angry accusations.

Do porn trials automatically renew?

Yes, almost all porn trials auto-renew at the full membership price unless you cancel before the trial period ends. For example, a “$1 for 2 days” trial might renew at $39.95/month on day 3. If you accepted a porn trial cross sale at checkout, you could have multiple auto-renewals on different schedules—the main site renewing monthly and the add-on renewing every two weeks. Always check the renewal terms on the payment page and set a calendar reminder to cancel before the trial ends if you don’t want to continue.

Pro tip: Screenshot the checkout page showing the renewal date and price—that’s your proof if you’re charged incorrectly.

Are porn trial offers safe or a scam?

Legitimate porn trials from established studios are safe—they’re real offers, not scams. The problem isn’t fraud, it’s poor checkout design: porn trial cross sales that are pre-selected, hidden upsells that add extra charges, and auto-renewal terms buried in fine print. The trials themselves work as advertised, but if you don’t read the payment page carefully, you can end up with memberships you didn’t intend to activate. Stick to trials from known brands, always review the checkout page for extra checkboxes, confirm the exact total before submitting, and set a cancellation reminder.

The trials featured on this page are from verified studios with clean checkout processes—no hidden traps.

What are the best porn trials without hidden fees?

The best porn trials without hidden fees are the ones I’ve listed at the top of this page—personally tested in the last 60 days with verified clean checkouts. Every one passed my checklist: no pre-ticked porn trial cross sales, no surprise add-ons at payment, and the advertised trial price is exactly what you pay. I screenshot the entire signup flow before listing any trial, so if something changes (hidden charges appear, cross-sales get added), I update or remove it immediately. These are trials where what you see is what you get.

How do I cancel a porn trial before it renews?

Log into your account and look for “Billing”, “Subscriptions”, “My Account”, or “Membership” in the member area. Most sites have a “Cancel Membership” or “Turn Off Rebilling” button there. If you can’t find it, check your confirmation email—it usually includes a direct cancellation link or instructions. For trials processed through third-party billing (Epoch, CCBill, etc.), you can also cancel through the processor’s support portal using your email and transaction details. Cancel at least 24-48 hours before the renewal date to ensure it processes in time. Take a screenshot of the cancellation confirmation as proof.

Important: If you accepted a porn trial cross sale, you may need to cancel multiple subscriptions separately—they won’t all cancel together.

Can I dispute a porn site charge with my bank?

You can dispute a charge if it’s genuinely unauthorized or fraudulent. However, if you signed up for a trial (even if you didn’t realize you accepted a porn trial cross sale), the charge is technically authorized and a dispute might not succeed. Try resolving it with the billing processor first: cancel the subscription, request a refund review, and provide evidence you didn’t intend the purchase. If the processor won’t help and you believe the charge was deceptive or unauthorized, contact your card issuer to discuss dispute options. Be honest about what happened—your bank can see your authorization history.

Why does my porn trial charge show a different company name?

Adult sites use discreet billing, meaning the charge descriptor on your statement shows the payment processor’s name (like “EPOCH.COM” or “CCBill Support”) instead of the actual porn site name. This is for privacy. Your confirmation email will tell you exactly what will appear on your statement—look for a line like “Billing descriptor: EPOCH.COM” or “Statement appears as: SEGPAY*WEBSITENAME”. If you see multiple different company names for charges from the same signup session, that’s a sign you activated multiple subscriptions through porn trial cross sales.

How can I avoid getting charged for porn trial cross sales?

Pause on the payment page and scan for pre-ticked checkboxes, extra product names, or multiple prices. Untick anything labeled “bonus”, “upgrade”, “partner access”, or “recommended” that you didn’t explicitly choose. Confirm the “today’s total” matches the advertised trial price. Read the renewal terms to check for multiple subscriptions or different renewal dates. Screenshot the final checkout screen before clicking submit. Save your confirmation email. If you see more than one product name or more than one price, that’s a porn trial cross sale—decide if you actually want it before proceeding.

Or use the verified trials at the top of this page where I’ve already confirmed there are no cross-sale traps.

Bottom line

Porn trial cross sales aren’t inherently bad—some people want the extra access and the bundled pricing can be good value. The problem is presentation: when they’re pre-selected, buried in fine print, or presented in ways that make them easy to miss, they stop being “optional” and start being traps.

That’s why I built this site. I’ve tested over 200 trial offers in 12 years. The ones listed above are the trials that passed the clean checkout test: no pre-ticked cross-sales, no surprise add-ons, no hidden charges beyond the advertised trial price. Whether it’s $1 or $5 or truly free, what you see on the landing page is exactly what you’ll pay at checkout.

If you want to explore trials on your own, use the checkout routine above to avoid porn trial cross sales. If you want to skip the detective work, use the verified trials at the top of this page. Either way, you now know exactly what to look for and how to avoid paying for things you didn’t ask for.

See all verified trial offers with clean checkouts →

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