Webtoon Premium is super convenient for binge-reading, but I totally get why someone might want to cancel—maybe you’ve caught up on your favorites or just want to trim subscriptions. Here’s how I did it: First, open the app and tap your profile icon in the top-right corner. Go to 'Settings,' then scroll down to 'Manage Subscription.' From there, you’ll see your active plan with an option to cancel. It’s pretty straightforward, but remember, cancelling doesn’t refund unused time; you keep access until the billing cycle ends.
If you subscribed through Google Play or Apple, you’ll need to cancel via those platforms instead. For Google, open the Play Store, tap your profile, go to 'Payments & Subscriptions,' and find Webtoon there. Apple users can head to Settings > [your name] > Subscriptions. One thing to note: Webtoon doesn’t prorate refunds, so timing matters. I cancelled right after a renewal once and kicked myself for not doing it earlier! Still, the process is painless—just a few taps and you’re free.
I recently cancelled my Webtoon Premium after realizing I wasn’t using it enough to justify the cost. If you subscribed directly through Webtoon’s website, log in and navigate to your account settings. There’s a 'Membership' tab where you can turn off auto-renewal. For app store subscriptions, it’s a different route—Google Play or Apple’s subscription management handles it. I use Android, so I went to the Play Store, tapped 'Subscriptions,' and cancelled from there.
One thing I wish I’d known earlier: even after cancelling, your Premium status stays active until the end of the billing period. No sudden cutoff, which is nice. Also, Webtoon doesn’t delete your coins, so spend them before they expire!
Cancelling Webtoon Premium isn’t tricky, but the steps vary depending on how you signed up. I subscribed through the app store, so I had to cancel through my iPhone settings. Go to Settings, tap your Apple ID at the top, then select 'Subscriptions.' Find Webtoon in the list and hit 'Cancel Subscription.' Done! If you joined via the Webtoon website, log into your account, click your profile, and look for the subscription management page. The interface is clean, but it’s easy to miss—sometimes buried under 'Payment Methods' or 'Billing.'
A heads-up: Webtoon doesn’t send a confirmation email when you cancel, which freaked me out at first. I double-checked in my app store subscriptions to make sure it went through. Also, if you’re on Android, the process is similar but through Google Play’s subscription hub. Either way, you’ll keep Premium until the next billing date, so enjoy those coins while they last!
2026-04-22 15:55:47
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Alpha, Let's End This Bond!
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Aria Kingsley never asked to be Luna. A forced heat, an accidental pregnancy, and a Council mandate locked her into a marriage with Luca Stormbourne, Alpha of StormRidge Pack, the man every wolf expected would claim another she-wolf as his mate.
Two years later, Aria decides she’s done with his indifference, Ivy Castemont’s constant taunts and bullying, and being an outsider of her own pack.
She wants one thing: severing their bond.
But the moment Aria tries to leave, everything she thought she understood starts to unravel. The dying Old Alpha calls her to his bedside and murmurs a truth that turns her world inside out.
Every clue that Aria uncovers pushes Luca closer instead of farther. His wolf turns possessive, his scent shifts toward hers, and the man who once hurt her now swears he won’t let her go.
But love isn’t the only danger rising. Someone is willing to destroy the Stormbourne line and Aria before the truth comes to light.
When love and betrayal clash, will Aria choose to run from Luca, or will she ruin anyone who dares to come between them?
And the most terrifying question of all, if fate didn’t go wrong… what if fate finally went right?
A Luna born to be rejected… becomes the most powerful of all.
On my wedding day, my husband abandoned me to marry his childhood sweetheart, while I was tortured to death.
***
Yeah. That was how my first life ended, pathetic. Wasn't it?
I was the perfect fiancée: quiet, obedient, hopelessly in love with a man who never loved me back.
For three years, I erased myself to become Adrian Whitmore's first love, Isabella Clarke, the woman he truly loved. I cooked for him, fought for him, and even gave up my father's company for him.
And what did I get in return?
Betrayal. Humiliation. Death.
But heaven gave me another chance.
I wake up three years earlier, at our engagement party. The same party where Adrian threw our rings into the pool and I—desperate and pathetic—dove in to retrieve them.
Not this time.
This time, I throw the rings back in his face. I expose his secrets, reclaim my father's empire, and walk away from the man who never deserved me.
But Adrian isn't ready to let go.
The obedient woman who worshipped him is gone, replaced by someone he can't control or predict. For the first time in his arrogant life, he wants what he can't have—me.
Too bad I'm done being anyone's second choice.
With a sweet billionaire offering genuine devotion and a dangerous mafia boss promising absolute protection, I finally have options.
Meanwhile, Adrian watches helplessly as I become everything he never let me be.
In my first life, I died for love. In my second life, everyone who hurt me will pay.
My CEO wife, Vivian Lynch, suffers from chronic insomnia and can only fall asleep with the pillow mists I make.
At our seventh wedding anniversary dinner, her male best friend, Earl Cain, pours a basin of hot water onto the old cypress tree in the backyard.
I rush to save the tree in tears.
Earl gets on his knees and apologizes, "I'm sorry, Allen. I did not know that you use this tree's leaves to make the pillow mists."
Vivian comforts him gently and orders her men to tie me to the trunk of the tree.
She says with a scoff, "If this tree is so precious, then you can spend your life guarding it!"
After I hurt my hands from this ordeal, the first thing I do is to demand a divorce.
On one night a month later, Vivian, who is unable to sleep, goes to the backyard and sees the withered old cypress tree there.
I return home from my business trip that night.
The pharmacy I always go to calls to say that my membership card was used that afternoon, but the payment failed, and the account needs to be topped up.
I look over at my wife, Catherine Francis, who's focused on making dinner. I ask her what she bought.
She smiles and pulls out a box of supplements. "I've been staying up late working these past few days. My heart's been acting up a little, so I bought some heart supplements."
Seeing my expression go flat, she lets out a helpless sigh and takes a card out of her bag.
"I know you're particular about money. Since I accidentally used your membership card, I'll pay you back ten times. Okay?"
However, I don't take the card like I used to. I just look at her calmly and say, "Let's get a divorce."
After completing my studies overseas, it's time for me to marry Cynthia Norton, my childhood sweetheart.
But on the day I'm supposed to pick up the wedding tuxedo, I see my tuxedo, which is a custom-ordered suit that's worth a million dollars, being worn by Theodore Hasting, the low-income student Cynthia is currently sponsoring.
When I demand that the tuxedo be returned, I get called the homewrecker instead. People even mock me for being a boy toy who wants to take the shortcut by clinging to a rich woman.
Cynthia tells me Theodore has never experienced wearing a wedding tuxedo before, so she wants me to graciously give him the chance.
I like doing charity work the most. Since I can give a million-dollar wedding tuxedo away, I should just give the marriage contract away too.
Then again, not anyone can simply accept the marriage contract meant for me, the heir of the Emerson family.
When Edna Crossby ditches the marriage registration for the fifth time, I block her contact number and social media accounts on the spot.
If she's in any of the social gatherings, I turn down the invitations right away.
I'd rather take the long route than walk past the cafe Edna frequents.
If she attends a team-building session, I take the day off without hesitation.
Even when Edna shows up on my doorstep with gifts in hand on Christmas Eve, I pretend that I'm not home at all.
I don't answer any calls from her. I don't respond to texts she sends me. Just like that, I completely fade away from Edna's world.
In the past, Edna used to be the focus of my life. My emotions fluctuated all the time because of her.
When Edna flakes out on me for the fifth time, I finally snap out of my lovesick stupor.
I don't want to live life like this anymore. Rather than getting abandoned time and again, I might as well live my life on my own happily.
If that subscription icon in the corner has been quietly draining your wallet, here’s how I walked myself out of it and what I’d tell a friend who asked me to hold their phone.
First, figure out where you subscribed. If your receipt came from Google Play or Apple, you have to cancel through those stores — not the app. On Android I open the Play Store, tap my profile photo, choose 'Payments & subscriptions' → 'Subscriptions', find the app, and tap 'Cancel subscription' then follow the confirmation steps. On iPhone I go to Settings, tap my name at the top, choose 'Subscriptions', locate the app subscription and hit 'Cancel Subscription'. After canceling, the subscription usually stays active until the end of the billing period, so you won’t lose what you’ve already paid for immediately.
If the charge came from the site (you might see a webnovel.com receipt), log into the website, go to your account or wallet section, and look for 'Membership' or 'Subscriptions' — there’ll usually be a 'Manage' or 'Cancel' link. Some versions of the app let you manage auto-renewal directly inside Profile → Settings → Manage Subscription or Payment Methods; if you see that, use it. If you ever subscribed through a third-party (PayPal, for example), cancel that authorization through their dashboard.
A couple of extra tips I wish someone told me sooner: check the email receipt to see which platform processed payment (it’ll say Google Play, Apple, or Webnovel). If you want a refund, Apple/Google handle refunds for app-store purchases and Webnovel support handles site payments — submit a request through the Help Center on the website. Don’t just delete the app; cancelling the subscription is a separate step. After I canceled mine I felt oddly proud — like reclaiming a little more free time and money.
Webtoon Premium has been a game-changer for me, especially as someone who devours comics like they're going out of style. The biggest perk? Early access to episodes. I used to hate waiting weeks for new chapters of my favorite series like 'Tower of God' or 'Lore Olympus,' but with Premium, I get to binge ahead. It’s like having VIP access to a concert—you’re right there in the front row while everyone else is stuck in line. The coins system is a bit of a double-edged sword, though. You get free coins monthly, but burning through them on fast passes can feel like a trap if you’re not careful. Still, for the sheer convenience and supporting creators directly, I think it’s worth the occasional splurge.
Another angle is the ad-free experience. I didn’t realize how much ads disrupted my reading flow until they vanished. The artwork in webtoons is often stunning, and ads popping up mid-scene used to yank me out of the story. Plus, there’s something satisfying about knowing part of my subscription goes back to the artists. It’s not perfect—some series still lock episodes behind hefty coin paywalls—but for $4.99 a month, it’s cheaper than buying physical manga volumes. If you’re a casual reader, maybe skip it, but for hardcore fans, it’s a no-brainer.
Webtoon Premium does have a free trial, but it’s not always available—it pops up during special promotions or for first-time subscribers. I signed up during a holiday event last year and got a week of free access to locked episodes. The trial gave me a taste of series like 'Tower of God' and 'True Beauty' without committing financially. It’s a great way to binge-read before deciding if the subscription’s worth it.
That said, the trial isn’t permanent. If you’re eyeing it, check their official social media or app notifications for limited-time offers. Sometimes they partner with creators to unlock certain episodes temporarily, too. I’d recommend timing your trial around a series you’re dying to read—like when 'Omniscient Reader' drops a cliffhanger—to maximize the benefit. The platform’s pretty upfront about trial terms, so just avoid auto-renewal if you’re on the fence.