You see a tool you like. It offers a "lifetime deal" for $59. Pay once, use forever. Sounds great — until "forever" turns out to mean 18 months.
The uncomfortable truth: in nearly every Terms of Service, "lifetime" refers to the lifetime of the product, not yours. And products die all the time.
Here are 11 real examples of what happens when lifetime deals end early.
The graveyard of lifetime deals
Wondershare Filmora — the version trick
Filmora sold "lifetime" licenses for $59.99. When version 14 launched in 2022, they told customers their "lifetime" license only covered the version they bought — not future versions. When YouTuber EposVox covered the story, Filmora hit him with a DMCA takedown. They eventually apologized, but a class action lawsuit was filed in February 2024.
Lifetime lasted: Until the next major version.
VPNSecure — new owner, no honor
On April 28, 2025, VPNSecure's new owners emailed all lifetime subscribers: your plan is canceled. Their reason? They "didn't know about" the lifetime deals when they acquired the company. Customers who paid for permanent access were offered a discounted annual plan instead.
Lifetime lasted: Until the acquisition.
Ivacy VPN — "lifetime means 5 years"
Ivacy VPN quietly redefined "lifetime" in their terms to mean 5 years — "the lifecycle of the software." When customers complained, support pointed them to the fine print. The company was later acquired by PureVPN.
Lifetime lasted: 5 years, by their definition.
SiriusXM — $96 million mistake
SiriusXM sold "lifetime" satellite radio subscriptions, then claimed "lifetime" referred to the device's lifetime, not the subscriber's. When your car radio died, so did your subscription. A class action followed, and SiriusXM settled for $96 million in 2021.
Lifetime lasted: Until the hardware broke.
LeadCart — took the money and disappeared
LeadCart sold lifetime deals ranging from $300 to $1,000 through AppSumo. They collected hundreds of thousands of dollars. In January 2022, the platform shut down entirely. No refunds, no migration path, no warning.
Lifetime lasted: Months to ~2 years.
Gyana — three months
Gyana, a data analytics platform, sold lifetime deals on AppSumo. The platform shut down just three months after some customers purchased. The product simply ceased to exist.
Lifetime lasted: 3 months.
ChatPlayground AI — AI costs caught up
ChatPlayground AI sold lifetime access through AppSumo, then revoked all lifetime deals in 2025. Their explanation: AI API costs made it unsustainable. They asked users to repurchase at $875. The original deal was a fraction of that price.
Lifetime lasted: Until the API bills got too high.
iBrave Hosting — sold until the end
iBrave offered "lifetime" web hosting through StackSocial. The company shut down on November 1, 2024. StackSocial was still actively selling the "lifetime" deal less than 20 days before closure.
Lifetime lasted: Until shutdown — and they were still selling it days before.
Wope — the silent death
Wope, an SEO tool sold through AppSumo, simply went silent in 2025. The team stopped responding, the product stopped being maintained, and there was no formal shutdown announcement. Users were left with a tool that slowly stopped working.
Lifetime lasted: Until the team gave up.
Pocket Casts — free, then not
Pocket Casts was a popular paid podcast app. In 2019, the one-time purchase app went free — then moved key features behind a subscription paywall. Users who paid for the app got a degraded experience unless they subscribed.
Lifetime lasted: Until the business model changed.
Timepage by Moleskine — "complimentary access"
Timepage was a premium calendar app sold as a one-time purchase. Moleskine converted it to a subscription model and gave existing users "complimentary" access — which they called a "limited-time offer." Pay once, use forever became pay once, get a temporary grace period.
Lifetime lasted: Until the subscription model looked more profitable.
The math doesn't work
About 40% of AppSumo lifetime deals fail within 3 years, according to community analyses. AppSumo's own revenue dropped 50% over 2024-2025 as the marketplace model showed its cracks.
The economics are simple: AppSumo takes up to 70% of the deal revenue. A $59 lifetime deal nets the developer ~$18 per customer. That customer then uses the product — and its servers, support, and infrastructure — indefinitely. The more successful the deal, the faster the company burns through cash.
One prolific lifetime deal buyer documented losing access to over 100 products after spending six figures on deals over several years.
Red flags to watch for
Before buying a lifetime deal, check for these:
- Early-stage startup with no other revenue. If the lifetime deal is their primary funding, the math will catch up.
- High ongoing costs. AI tools, hosting services, and anything with per-user infrastructure costs are especially risky.
- No clear business model beyond the deal. If you can't see how they'll make money after the promotion ends, they probably can't either.
- Sold through a marketplace (AppSumo, StackSocial) where the platform takes a massive cut.
- Vague ToS about what "lifetime" means. If they don't define it, they'll define it later — in their favor.
When lifetime deals actually work
Not all lifetime deals are traps. They work best when:
- The product is mature and profitable with an existing subscriber base (the deal is marketing, not funding)
- Marginal cost per user is near zero (desktop software, offline tools)
- The company has other revenue streams and isn't dependent on deal income
- The deal is sold directly by the company, not through a marketplace that takes 70%
Bottom line
"Lifetime" in software means the product's lifetime, not yours. Courts have consistently upheld this interpretation. Before you buy, ask yourself: will this product exist in 3 years? If you're not confident, a monthly subscription you can cancel is cheaper than a lifetime deal you'll lose.
The best deal is a product that's still around when you need it.