What's Hot

    Kahoot’s free trial gives teachers a window to test paid features before spending anything. But getting the trial set up correctly — and knowing how students exploit games once you’re live — matters as much as the subscription itself. Here’s what to know before you start.

    How the Kahoot Free Trial Works

    Kahoot runs a 7-day free trial on select plans. To access it, a “Start free trial” button must appear on the pricing page when you’re signed in. If that button isn’t visible, the trial isn’t available for your account or the plan you’re viewing.

    Once the 7 days end, Kahoot automatically charges the price you agreed to when signing up. There’s no grace period and no manual renewal step.

    Detail What It Means
    Trial duration7 days (standard)
    Activation requirement“Start free trial” button must appear on pricing page
    Previous trial usersCannot activate a second trial on the same account
    PromotionsSome discounts only apply via “Buy now,” not the trial path
    Mobile app billingHandled by the App Store — Kahoot has no access to those systems

    If you already used a trial on your account, starting another one may trigger a paid subscription immediately. For any mobile billing issues, contact Apple or Google directly.

    Kahoot Free Trial vs. Free Plan: What You Actually Get

    The free plan covers basic quiz hosting. The trial unlocks features that matter specifically for classroom control — player authentication and session locking chief among them.

    Feature
    Free Plan
    Free Trial (Paid)
    Player authentication
    2-step PIN verification
    Session locking
    Custom nickname control
    Partial
    Detailed reports
    Basic
    Full
    Up to 2,000 players

    What Students Do to Cheat During Kahoot Games

    Students don’t need technical skill. Instructions for several attack types are freely available online, and curious students find them quickly.

    Common Kahoot Hacks to Watch For

    The most frequent methods teachers encounter include bot flooding — where fake players fill the lobby using automated tools — and answer-reveal sites that display the correct option in real time. Some students also manipulate the nickname generator or, less commonly, attempt denial-of-service attacks that knock everyone offline.

    Answer cheating is harder to spot than bot spam. One teacher noticed her highest-scoring student had a failing grade in the class; the next day, when she asked who knew how to cheat at Kahoot, his hand was first up. Screen monitoring tools like GoGuardian or Classwize let you view every student screen simultaneously and cut access remotely. Learn more about the full range of Kahoot hacks students commonly attempt.

    Stopping Kahoot Hacks During Your Free Trial

    The trial period is the right time to configure all security settings, not after you’ve already run a compromised session.

    Prevention Method Effectiveness (Teacher-Reported)
    Player authentication
    92%
    2-step PIN (7s rotate)
    88%
    Screen monitoring
    84%
    Block known cheat sites
    78%
    Require real names
    65%
    Lock game before start
    60%

    Enable player authentication first — it assigns each student a unique identifier used only once, which stops bots and answer-sharers from re-entering under different names. Pair that with session locking before you hit start, and most disruption methods fail immediately.

    Ask your IT team to block known cheat domains on school devices. It takes one request and eliminates answer-reveal sites entirely. If you want to create a Kahoot with these controls built in from the start, the authentication and locking settings appear during quiz setup.

    If a session gets disrupted anyway, close the game immediately. Students quickly learn that disrupting Kahoot ends the fun for everyone — peer pressure handles the rest.

    For a broader look at how Kahoot compares with alternatives, Blooket vs Kahoot and Kahoot vs Quizizz break down where each platform holds up and where it falls short. If you’re setting up your first game and need to understand how students enter a session, the Kahoot.it join page explains the process from the student side. And if you want to avoid the awkward nickname generator entirely, pre-setting funny Kahoot names gives students something to pick from without opening the door to anonymous abuse.

    FAQs

    Can I get a Kahoot free trial more than once?

    No. Kahoot allows one trial per account. Attempting to start a second trial on the same account may immediately trigger a paid subscription instead.

    What happens when the Kahoot free trial ends?

    Kahoot automatically charges the subscription price you agreed to at signup. There’s no manual renewal step and no grace period after the 7-day window closes.

    Does the Kahoot free trial include player authentication?

    Yes. Player authentication — which requires each student to enter a unique identifier — is available during the trial. It’s one of the most effective tools for stopping bot flooding and answer cheating.

    How do I join a Kahoot session as a student?

    Students go to Kahoot.it and enter the game PIN the teacher provides. You can see the full process on the Kahoot join page, which covers every step from the student side.

    Is the Kahoot free trial available on mobile?

    Mobile subscriptions are managed by the App Store or Google Play, not Kahoot directly. Trial availability and billing for mobile must be handled through your app store account.

    Francesco is a maker, engineer, and 3D printing enthusiast passionate about building tools and spaces that inspire creativity. With a background in software development and hands-on hardware projects, he explores the intersection of digital fabrication, productivity, and modern workspaces. When he’s not designing or experimenting, Francesco shares insights to help others create smarter, more efficient environments for work and making.