You were using the service normally.
The trial was active.
Premium features were available.
Then the trial period ended.
And suddenly the service stopped working.
Trial Expiration Automatically Changes Account Status
Most subscription platforms manage access through account status settings.
During the trial period, the account is usually marked as active.
Once the trial ends, the system updates the subscription state.
- Trial status expires
- Subscription becomes inactive
- Premium access is removed
This transition happens automatically inside the platform’s billing system.
What “Inactive Subscription” Actually Means
An inactive subscription does not mean the account is deleted.
The account itself still exists.
However, the paid service entitlement is no longer valid.
Because of this change, certain features stop working.
- Premium tools may become unavailable
- Locked content cannot be opened
- Some service menus may disappear
Why Platforms Use Inactive Status After Trials
Subscription services separate account identity from subscription privileges.
This allows users to keep their accounts even when no plan is active.
Instead of deleting access entirely, the platform simply changes the subscription state.
Inactive status indicates that the account exists but does not currently hold a paid plan.
How Access Can Be Restored
If the subscription status shows inactive after a trial ends, access usually returns when a plan is activated.
Once a paid subscription is started, the system updates the account state again.
- Inactive → Active subscription
- Premium access restored
- Restricted features unlocked
If your trial recently ended and the account now shows inactive,
the platform simply updated your subscription status after the trial expired.