# "Get it for Free" recurring referral loop > Offer customers a small recurring discount for every active referral so that maintaining enough referrals makes their subscription free, turning them into permanent recruiters via loss aversion. - Canonical HTML: https://growth.iangoh.com/growth-ideas/get-it-for-free-recurring-referral-loop/ - Source: [stormy.ai](https://stormy.ai/blog/2026-referral-marketing-playbook-viral-growth-loops) - GrowthDex source hub: [stormy.ai](/sources/stormy-ai-stormy-ai/) - Last checked: March 22, 2026 - Rarity: common - Budget: free - Channels: Referrals - Stages: 0-100, 100-1K ## Why this can grow Unlike one-time referral bonuses that are quickly forgotten, a recurring $1-off-per-active-referral model triggers loss aversion. When a referred user cancels, the referrer's bill ticks up, motivating them to immediately find a replacement. This creates a self-healing growth loop where customers actively maintain their referral network to protect their zero-dollar balance. The marginal cost of each new user is near zero in fixed-cost businesses, so the discounts are effectively free marketing spend. ## Ian's take From scaling consumer platforms across MENA and Southeast Asia, my default is to distrust growth work that only looks good in a slide. The best referral loops I have seen do not feel like campaigns. They feel like the next natural thing after someone gets value. I would look for the exact moment a user feels smart, helped, or ahead, then ask for the share there. I would run it small enough to learn quickly, then only scale the parts that real users repeat, save, reply to, or buy from. For this tactic, I would watch one clear growth signal before putting more time or budget behind it. ## Action plan 1. Define one narrow startup segment where "get it for free" recurring referral loop can create a measurable lift. 2. Turn the tactic into one offer, page, campaign, or workflow for the Referrals channel. 3. Use the evidence from stormy.ai to set the first version of the message, format, and audience. 4. Launch a small test for 7 to 14 days with one success metric: one measurable growth signal. 5. Review the result, keep the winning message, remove weak variants, and turn the learning into a repeatable growth playbook. ## Source-backed example High-volume gyms (e.g. Planet Fitness model), adapted for SaaS and subscription apps ## Adjacent tactics in the same lane - [Recurring micro-discount referral loop ("Get it for Free")](/growth-ideas/recurring-micro-discount-referral-loop-get-it-for-free/) - same source, 1 shared channel, 2 shared stages - ["Get it for Free" recurring referral discount loop](/growth-ideas/get-it-for-free-recurring-referral-discount-loop/) - same source, 1 shared channel, 2 shared stages - [Earn-it-free stacking referral program](/growth-ideas/earn-it-free-stacking-referral-program/) - same source, 1 shared channel, 2 shared stages - [Single-channel SEO dominance for early SaaS](/growth-ideas/single-channel-seo-dominance-for-early-saas/) - same source, 2 shared stages ## Read GrowthDex essays Browse the plain-English essay index at [GrowthDex Blog](/blog/). ## Advisory If you want help turning this into a working growth system, Ian Goh offers advisory at https://iangoh.com/advisory.