Does a trial expire automatically?
Yes! PingPing's free trial expires automatically after 14 days. You do not need to cancel anything, and we never ask for a credit card to start.
What's Included in the 14-Day Trial?
During your trial you get full access to every PingPing feature, including uptime checks as fast as every 30 seconds, SSL certificate monitoring, notification channels (email, Slack, Discord, Telegram, webhooks), public or private status pages with custom domain support, team member access, and the developer API. You can add up to 5 websites and test everything exactly as it works on a paid plan.
The purpose of the trial is to let you experience PingPing's speed advantage first-hand. Most competing tools check every 3–5 minutes. PingPing can check every 30 seconds, which means you learn about downtime up to 10× faster. That difference is hard to appreciate from a feature list. You need to see it in action when a real incident happens.
What Happens When the Trial Ends?
When your 14 days are up, monitoring simply stops. Your account stays intact, so you keep your dashboard, your configuration, and your history. Nothing is deleted. If you choose to upgrade, monitoring resumes from where it left off.
If you were mid-incident when the trial ended, you will not receive further alerts until you subscribe to a paid plan.
Can I Extend My Trial?
If 14 days was not enough time to experience a real downtime event, reach out to the PingPing team at [email protected]. Trial extensions are possible, though not commonly needed as most users see enough in 14 days to make a decision.
How Does PingPing's Trial Compare?
Many uptime monitoring tools either require a credit card upfront or limit trial features to basic HTTP checks only. PingPing gives you the full product with 30-second check intervals, SSL monitoring, status pages, and all notification integrations, without entering any payment details.