Market intelligence

Picsart v29.9.1 Moves Paid Features Behind New Paywall, Sparking User Backlash in May 2026

Picsart's version 29.9.1 update, released May 4, 2026, sparked severe user backlash by moving previously purchased features behind a new subscription paywall. This change caused the app's average rating to drop from 4.17 to 2.52 stars amid accusations of theft and reports of new bugs.

3 min read
The update moved previously purchased features behind a new, expensive paywall, forcing long-time users to subscribe for functionality they already owned or previously accessed for free.
Picsart AI Photo Editor, Video
On this page
  1. Update Summary
  2. Paywall Shift
  3. User Reception
  4. New Bugs
  5. Strategic Pivot
  6. Expert Verdict

Key takeaways

  1. 01Picsart's v29.9.1 update moved previously free or purchased items, like frames, behind a new subscription paywall.
  2. 02User ratings dropped sharply by 1.65 stars, from 4.17 to 2.52, after the update.
  3. 03Long-time users accused the company of 'stealing' by invalidating their past purchases.
  4. 04The update introduced significant bugs, including app crashes during editing and sign-in failures.
  5. 05The publisher, PicsArt, Inc., has not publicly addressed the complaints about lost purchases.
  6. 06The change appears to be a strategic pivot to a unified subscription model, affecting an app with over 2.2 million US iOS downloads in the past month.

Update SummaryLead

PicsArt, Inc.'s version 29.9.1 update for its popular photo editor, released May 4, 2026, moved previously purchased features behind a new subscription paywall1]venue-sensitive surface in a subscription app., triggering a sharp drop in user sentiment and accusations of invalidating prior purchases.

Paywall ShiftRelease Summary

The update from version 29.8.4 to 29.9.1 fundamentally altered the app's monetization strategy. While official release notes were generic, user reports confirm that existing assets, such as frames and fonts, were reclassified as premium content. This change forced users to subscribe to access tools and content they had either previously bought outright under an older model or had used for free for years.

The primary effect was not the addition of new functions but the erection of a stricter paywall around existing ones, alienating a segment of the app's large user base, which saw over 2.2 million downloads in the last 30 days on US iOS alone.

User ReceptionUser Reception

The reaction from users was immediate and severe. Average ratings for the 66 reviews following the update fell to 2.52 stars, a 1.65-star drop from the 4.17-star average on the previous version. The most pointed criticism came from veteran users who felt their loyalty and past purchases were disregarded.

One 1-star reviewer on v29.9.1 stated, "I’ve been using Picsart for like 15 years. Many years ago I bought packs of frames... Now they’ve moved the frames we paid for behind their obscenely priced weekly paywall... This is outright stealing from your long time loyal customers." Another user of seven years expressed similar frustration: "it recently updated and not I no longer can use it due to having to pay for it!! Very disappointing!"

New BugsBreaking Changes

Compounding the frustration over the new paywall, version 29.9.1 introduced significant technical problems. Users reported a pattern of new bugs that were not prominent in reviews for the prior version. The most common complaints included app crashes during the editing process and sign-in failures.

One user noted in a 1-star review, "I paid $11.99 to make a video/ slideshow and it kept kicking me out of the app more than 5 times." Others reported being met with a white screen instead of their photo gallery, rendering the app unusable. These concurrent technical failures suggest the update may have been poorly tested.

Strategic PivotRoot Cause

Analysis suggests the aggressive expansion of the subscription model is a deliberate strategic decision. Picsart appears to be pivoting to a unified, recurring revenue model, calculating that the income from new subscribers will outweigh the loss of goodwill from long-term users. This strategy prioritizes predictable subscription revenue over the à la carte purchases of the past.

However, the publisher's silence on the matter is notable. Picsart has not issued any public statement acknowledging the complaints or explaining its rationale for paywalling previously owned content. This lack of communication has likely intensified the negative user reaction.

Expert VerdictExpert Verdict

By alienating veteran users and failing to address their grievances, Picsart risks long-term brand damage. The current strategy appears to accept the user backlash as a necessary cost of transitioning its business model. However, this approach could erode the trust that helped build its large user base.

Unless the company offers a remedy for customers who lost access to paid content, it will likely face continued rating depression and may see disenfranchised users migrate to competitor apps. The publisher's next steps will determine if it can repair its relationship with its most loyal customers or if this marks a permanent shift in its user-base composition.

Citations

  1. [1]

    The release of Picsart version 29.9.1 on May 4, 2026, caused the app's average rating to drop from 4.17 to 2.52 stars.

    "The release of Picsart version 29.9.1 on May 4, 2026, triggered a severe user backlash, causing the app's average rating to plummet from 4.17 to 2.52 stars."
  2. [2]

    Long-time users reported that editing assets they had previously purchased were now locked behind a subscription.

    "I’ve been using Picsart for like 15 years. Many years ago I bought packs of frames back when they sold them individually. Guess what? Now they’ve moved the frames we paid for behind their obscenely priced weekly paywall..."
  3. [3]

    The update introduced new technical issues, including the app crashing during use and preventing users from completing edits.

    "I paid $11.99 to make a video/ slideshow and it kept kicking me out of the app more than 5 times and wouldn’t let me edit photos at first."

Sources

6 references

Maxime Doussin, CTO at MWM

Maxime Doussin

CTO

Maxime Doussin is the CTO of MWM, where he leads engineering, data infrastructure, and the mobile-app market-intelligence platform. He writes MWM's weekly app trend analysis, drawing on proprietary ranking data covering millions of iOS and Android apps across 150+ countries.

This article is an independent editorial analysis. App names, trademarks, and brands mentioned are the property of their respective owners. Market data and rankings referenced are based on MWM's proprietary estimates.

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