Free Wrinkle Cream
There is really no such thing as free, and most consumers know it. However, it’s easy to get sucked into a tricky little game that many wrinkle
cream companies like to play. The purpose of this page is to help point out some of the most common ways that the wrinkle cream companies convert a free offer into one that actually can cost you hundreds.
The first “trick” (I’ll use the word trick, since these methods just FEEL tricky to me) is that you are offered a “FREE” trial or membership. 99% of the time, this free trial is anything but free. What happens here is that you are actually joining an auto-ship program. This means that every month thereafter, your credit card will be billed for the wrinkle cream, and you will be sent another shipment automatically. This will continue until you figure out how to cancel the membership. The offer for free wrinkle cream really turns out to be repeated charges to your credit card that are quite often, difficult to cancel. The easiest way to spot these kinds of “wrinkle cream ripoffs” is to look for any site offering “FREE” anything, especially with an asterick. You had better take extra time to read the fine print on that website, and be sure to call the company to verify that you are not entering into any kind of auto-billing or auto-shipping wrinkle cream membership. There are more wrinkle creams out there who do this offer, than I can shake a stick at. Apparently, they fool enough people into buying their “Free” membership, that the ones who actually get really mad and file complaints are far outweighed. I won’t mention their names, because I don’t have to. Just read some wrinkle cream reviews on the site, and you’ll see the sites that do this.
Another sneaky little way that wrinkle cream companies trick you with a “Free” offer is by using what I’ll call the “bill you later” method. What happens here is that the website selling the cream claims that you get a FREE trial period without being billed. At the end of such trial, if you don’t want the cream, you just call them and cancel it, and you will never be billed. However, if you don’t call and cancel (which only works about half the time), you get billed for the full amount. So basically you are just financing the wrinkle cream. It’s no different than “buy now pay later” offers you see at car dealerships or department stores. The reason you have to be careful with this offer is that because the consumer isn’t billed until a month later, the wrinkle cream company feels entitled to use the word “FREE” in their offer. Many people focus on the customer testimonials, or before and after pictures, and just assume that free means free. It is somewhat misleading, and many customers (by their own fault) rush through the checkout process and end up buying a wrinkle cream they can’t afford. Just watch out, and read all the fine print. I also recommend using a live chat feature or calling their customer service to get a full explaination of how their so called, “Free” trial actually works.
The bottom line, guys, is that nothing is really free. The very best wrinkle creams who know their customers will come back and place follow-up or secondary orders do not bother with these sneaky methods. They know their product works, and they know customers will bother ordering again. Free trials might be nice to get your samples out there to consumers, but wrinkle cream samples are too costly to manufacture and ship for most wrinkle creams out there. Keep your eye out for tell-tale signs of trouble, remember what I said, and have fun. Shopping for new wrinkle creams can be a nice experience, but it’s even better if the wrinkle cream actually works and it costs what you thought it would.
I’m of course very partial to the dermajuv line of wrinkle creams. They offer nothing free, but they have good service and the products work.

