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How to Extend Adobe Free Trials to 21 Days Long, Instead of 7 Days
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How long are the free trials for Adobe software? Most people would say 7 days – but practically speak­ing, it’s three times as long, at 21 days. Here’s why, and how you can do it…

After downloading and installing the latest major release of Creative Cloud, your official free trial will run for seven calendar days starting from the date you sign up. Technically, it’s 7 days free before recurring billing for your subscription would begin.

Once you reach the end of those first 7 days, the trial period will end and your paid membership would begin. If you wish, you can cancel online and all the files you created will still be yours – but the software itself will no longer start on your system if you don’t continue with a subscription. And redown­loading or reinstall­ing the apps won’t give you a new free trial.

So, if your initial trial has expired but you haven’t decided yet whether you want to keep the tools, then what do you do? Well, aha – there’s a little-known tip, and it goes like this:

All Creative Cloud tools have Monthly subscription plans available that can be canceled at any time for any reason. Even individual apps like Photoshop or Illustrator or InDesign or Premiere or After Effects.

This is the key point. Adobe actually has an excellent Return Policy for products bought directly from them… All subscriptions are 100% fully refund­able if canceled within 14 days of purchase for any reason at all, using your “Manage Plan” online (self-service). And since the software is downloaded electronically, there’s nothing physical to return.

So, if you want or need additional time to evaluate the apps, then you actually have 14 more days (after the free trial ends) where you can use the software and still get a complete money-back refund, no questions asked. If you don’t want to continue further, just cancel the plan before those 14 additional days are up for a full refund issued back to your credit card (or PayPal).

So with this easy technique, you effectively extend your Adobe free trials to 21 days because you actually have up to three weeks to make a final decision on the products. In other words, you increase the length of time that you can try out and use them without cost. And of course if you want to keep on using the tools after that, even for a short time, then you’d only be paying by the month – because with CC’s straight­forward Month-to-Month Plan, you pay only for the months you need the software (as long or short as that may be).

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