Tonarino · Iseo — Booking
Each option attacks the same root problem: the production card crams five competing typographic treatments into one row. Every redesign restores the editorial title (Memoir, uppercase, letter-spaced) from the Figma source and gives the launch-discount promo somewhere deliberate to live. Click a card to select it; toggle the promo to see how each handles the no-discount case.
The first pass kept the launch discount inside each card. It works, but repeats the promo on every rate and competes with the price.
Since the launch discount applies to every rate, it belongs to the whole group, not each button. Hoisting it next to “Choose rate” returns the cards to the pristine Figma layout — just title, terms, strikethrough and price. The per-card strikethrough still shows the concrete saving on each rate.
Round 2 is the better direction: the discount applies to all rates, so it belongs to the group, not each button — and hoisting it returns the cards to the pristine Figma layout.
Round 2 · Option 1 — Inline tag is the lead, per your steer toward the corner-tag look beside the title. My one refinement: try the soft sand fill (as in Option 2) rather than the solid black pill — it keeps the tag unmissable but reads editorial rather than e-commerce. Option 2 (right-aligned) is the close runner-up: the tag sits over the price column, tying the discount to the numbers.
Within Round 1 (promo inside each card), Option 3 — Ribbon footer — remains the strongest, but it is superseded now that the promo lives in the header.