Streaming keeps getting more expensive: all the latest price hikes

5 hours ago 1

Death. Taxes. All your streaming services getting a little more expensive all the time. These are the new certainties in life, it seems.

Netflix has raised the cost of its subscription repeatedly in recent years. Disney Plus, Prime Video, HBO Max, Paramount Plus, Peacock — practically any service you can name — charges more per month than it did a few years ago, and many of them have introduced ad breaks. As customers cancel cable more quickly than anyone expected, the studios and distributors are looking for a way to make up the lost revenue. Good shows, live sports, and movies are more in demand — and thus more expensive — than ever.

And after a decade of spending money like it was going out of style because all investors cared about were subscriber numbers, companies are looking for any way they can to improve their bottom line. They’re cracking down on password sharing, canceling shows for the tax breaks, and even selling prized content to other platforms. But the most common strategy is simply to charge you, the viewer, more.

We’re tracking all the price increases and other changes from streaming services so you can make sure you’re only paying for what you want. (We’ll also include discounts and deals, though those seem to happen less and less.) Here’s the latest:

  • Emma Roth

    Netflix is raising prices again

    Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

    Netflix’s prices just went up, with its cheapest, ad-supported tier now reaching $8.99 / month (up from $7.99 / month), according to an updated support page spotted earlier by Android Authority. The standard and premium plans are also getting a hike, going from $17.99 to $19.99 / month and $24.99 to $26.99 / month, respectively.

    The streaming giant last raised its prices in January 2025 and has made several updates to its platform since then, including launching video podcasts, continuing a push into live events, rolling out new TV games, and revamping its interface on both its TV app and mobile. It also nearly acquired the Warner Bros. studio and its streaming service, HBO Max, for $83 billion before declining to match a higher bid from Paramount.

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  • Emma Roth

    Amazon Prime Video nearly doubles the price to go ad-free and stream 4K video

    STKB333_PRIME_VIDEO_B

    STKB333_PRIME_VIDEO_B

    Starting April 10th, Amazon’s ad-free Prime Video subscription will be rebranded as Ultra as its price increases to $4.99 per month from the current $2.99. Once it launches, it will also be the “exclusive” way to access 4K/UHD streaming, removing 4K streaming access from Prime subscribers who don’t pay extra.

    Paying the extra five bucks for Ultra will also get you support for up to five simultaneous streams and up to 100 downloads, as well as access to both Dolby Vision HDR and Dolby Atmos audio. There are upgrades for Prime subscribers without Ultra after April 10th that will bring Dolby Vision (in 1080p) back after Amazon removed it from the plan in 2024, plus increases for both downloads (going up to 50 from 25) and simultaneous streams (going up to four from three).

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  • Jay Peters

    Crunchyroll is raising prices again

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    filters-quality(95)format(webp)-2

    Image: Crunchyroll

    Crunchyroll is raising its prices in the US and “select international markets,” including the first price hike to its lowest-priced tier since 2019.

    Here are the price changes, according to Crunchyroll:

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  • Emma Roth

    Paramount Plus is getting a price hike in early 2026

    An image showing the Paramount Plus logo

    An image showing the Paramount Plus logo

    Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

    Paramount Plus is going up in price again. As part of its earnings report released on Monday, Paramount announced that it will raise prices for subscribers in the US on January 15th, 2026, bringing the ad-supported Essential plan from $7.99 to $8.99 per month, while the ad-free Premium plan will go from $12.99 to $13.99 per month.

    Paramount says the price increase will “fuel continued reinvestment in the user experience and deliver an even stronger slate of programming” going forward. Like many other streamers, Paramount has hiked the price of its streaming service on an almost yearly basis. Paramount Plus raised prices in 2023 before hiking them further last June. It also recently raised prices in Canada and Australia.

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  • Richard Lawler

    HBO Max is raising prices for the third year in a row

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    STK055_HBOMAX_2_B

    Image: The Verge

  • Emma Roth

    Apple TV Plus is getting more expensive and will cost $12.99 per month

    acastro_STK069_appleTVPlus_04 (1)

    acastro_STK069_appleTVPlus_04 (1)

    Image: Alex Castro / The Verge

    Apple is raising the price of its streaming service. The company announced on Thursday that its $9.99 per month subscription will now cost $12.99 each month, marking a $3 price increase.

    The price increase will go into effect immediately for new subscribers, while existing ones will see the changes reflected 30 days after their billing cycle ends, Apple spokesperson Tom Neumayr confirmed in an emailed statement to The Verge.

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  • Charles Pulliam-Moore

    Roku’s new ad-free video service only costs $2.99 per month

    Roku Howdy promo

    Roku Howdy promo

    Today, Roku announced the forthcoming arrival of Howdy, a new monthly subscription service that will give its users access to a massive catalog of on-demand films and series. Like other streamers, Howdy will feature a selection of programming licensed from other studios, including Lionsgate and Warner Bros., as well as some of its Roku Original productions like Weird: The Al Yankovic Story. But Howdy will be ad-free, and at $2.99 a month, it’s much cheaper than other players in the streaming space — all of which have gradually raised their prices in efforts to boost profits.

    In a statement about the service, Roku founder and CEO Anthony Wood said that Howdy is “designed to complement, not compete with” other, more premium platforms. Wood also stressed that Howdy costs less than a cup of coffee and insisted that Roku is trying to meet customers where they are by offering Howdy at such a relatively low price point.

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  • Emma Roth

    Peacock is raising its prices by $3

    acastro_STK105_peacock_02 (1)

    acastro_STK105_peacock_02 (1)

    Image: Alex Castro / The Verge

    A subscription to Peacock is about to cost more. NBCUniversal announced on Thursday that it’s raising the price of its ad-supported Peacock Premium from $7.99 to $10.99 per month, while its ad-free Premium Plus plan will go from $13.99 per month to $16.99 per month. News of the price hike was first reported by Vulture.

    For new customers, the price increase will go into effect on July 23rd. Existing subscribers will see the hike on or after August 22nd, depending on when their next bill is. Peacock’s yearly plans will see similar increases, with Peacock Premium now priced at $109.99 per year (up from $79.99) and Premium Plus costing $169.99 (up from $139.99).

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  • Emma Roth

    Max’s password sharing crackdown is about to get serious.

    Warner Bros. Discovery streaming head JB Perette said during an earnings call on Thursday that paid sharing prompts “will start getting firmer and more visible” in the coming months. Max added a $7.99 per month Extra Member option last month, which lets viewers share their password with someone outside their household.

  • Emma Roth

    Max is going to make you pay for people you share your password with

    STK055_HBOMAX__A

    STK055_HBOMAX__A

    Image: The Verge

    Max has become the latest streaming service to clamp down on password sharing. Warner Bros. Discovery announced on Tuesday that Max will charge an extra $7.99 per month to add someone to your account outside your household.

    The new “Extra Member Add-On” allows subscribers across all tiers to invite a friend or family member to create a separate account with their own login credentials. These members can stream from one device at a time and “enjoy all other benefits included in the primary account owner’s base plans,” according to Warner Bros. Discovery. Subscribers can only add one extra member per account.

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  • Emma Roth

    Plex Pass is going up in price — and now you’ll need it for remote playback

    plex-tv-logo

    plex-tv-logo

    Image: Plex

    Plex is raising the price of its Plex Pass from $4.99 to $6.99 per month and gating a key feature behind the subscription. Starting April 29th, users who want to stream content from their media server outside their homes – and let other people access it for free – will need a Plex Pass subscription.

    The price hike goes into effect on April 29th and will also bring its annual plan from $39.99 to $69.99. The lifetime plan will increase from $119.99 to $249.99. This change will affect new and existing subscribers, except those who already paid for a lifetime subscription.

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  • Charles Pulliam-Moore

    Max’s ad-supported tier is losing CNN and the Bleacher Report

    Vector illustration of the Max logo.

    Vector illustration of the Max logo.

    Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge

    Though Max has always said that it planned to charge more for access to its CNN and Bleacher Report Sports add-ons, the price hikes are coming in a roundabout way, targeted at subscribers of the streamer’s cheapest tier.

    Max announced today that it no longer intends to charge subscribers of its Standard ($16.99 / month or $169.99 / year) and Premium ($20.99 / month or $209.99 / year) tiers an extra $9.99 a month for CNN Max and Bleacher Reports Sports. The add-ons will be removed from Max’s ad-supported tier ($9.99 / month or $99.99 / year) beginning on March 30th, however, meaning that subscribers will have to move up to more expensive tiers should they want to keep watching live sports and news.

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  • Emma Roth

    Amazon Music Unlimited is getting a price hike

    Amazon Music logo over a blue and black background

    Amazon Music logo over a blue and black background

    Illustration: The Verge

    Amazon has raised the price of its Music Unlimited service in the US, Canada, and the UK, as reported by The Hollywood Reporter. In an update on its website, Amazon says it’s raising the price for Prime members from $9.99 to $10.99 per month (or $99 to $109 / year), while the plan for non-Prime members is going from $10.99 to $11.99 per month.

    The Unlimited Family Plan, which lets up to six people listen to music at the same time, is also increasing from $16.99 to $19.99 per month (or $169 to $199 / year). The price change went into effect for new subscribers on January 29th, 2025, while existing customers will have to pay the updated pricing when their subscription renews, or on or after March 5th, 2025.

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  • David Pierce

    Netflix won the streaming wars, and we’re all about to pay for it

    An illustration of the Netflix logo.

    An illustration of the Netflix logo.

    Illustration by Nick Barclay / The Verge

    Whenever Netflix raises its prices — which seems to happen roughly as often as Ben Affleck falls in love with an A-list celebrity — the company always gives the same reason. It needs the extra money, you see, in order to keep investing in the kind of programming and product its 302 million subscribers demand. That’s how the standard monthly price of ad-free Netflix jumped from $7.99 to $17.99 over the course of the last 13 years, including a $2.50 jump just announced during the company’s recent earnings report. There’s still a $7.99 monthly plan, of course, but that one includes ads — and it’s a dollar more expensive than it was a week ago.

    But let’s be real with each other. You want to know why Netflix keeps raising its prices? Because it can. Because Netflix won. The rest of the streaming industry is competing ferociously over a finite pool of money, dealing with carriage disputes because of dwindling subscriber numbers, and panicking over the future of TV. Netflix is the future of TV.

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  • Wes Davis

    Fubo’s cheapest streaming plan is now $85 per month

    Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge

    Fubo has raised its English-language streaming plan prices by $5 each, with a Fubo spokesperson citing “rising costs from our programming partners,” reported The Streamable yesterday. Fubo’s Essential and Pro plans now start at $85 a month, while its Elite plan has gone up to $95 monthly.

    “We only make adjustments when necessary,” a Fubo spokesperson said to The Streamable, “and we’re committed to keeping Fubo competitive while ensuring our subscribers have access to the channels, features and live events they enjoy.”

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  • Richard Lawler

    Amazon’s push to make Prime Video profitable.

    According to The Information, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy was annoyed by the costs of shows like LotR: The Rings of Power and Citadel and has pushed for the video service to be profitable by the end of this year. As Netflix raises prices, Prime is promoting shows from competing services and focusing more on live sports than originals.

    Amazon’s betting that sports can more reliably draw audiences to the Prime Video service than new movies and shows, significantly boosting its ad revenue, according to multiple people familiar with its strategy.

  • Emma Roth

    Remember when Netflix was just $7.99?

    The price of Netflix’s standard plan has more than doubled since 2011, with its new price hike bringing it to $17.99 / month.

  • Emma Roth

    Netflix is raising prices again, as the standard plan goes up to $17.99

    Netflix’s logo on a black and yellow background

    Netflix’s logo on a black and yellow background

    Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

    Netflix is raising prices yet again. In its latest earnings report released Tuesday, the streaming service announced that “we are adjusting prices today across most plans” in the US, Canada, Portugal, and Argentina.

    As shown on Netflix’s plans page, the ad-supported tier is increasing from $6.99 to $7.99 per month, while the standard ad-free tier will go from $15.49 to $17.99 per month. Its highest-priced premium tier is also increasing from $22.99 to $24.99 per month. The price hikes will go into effect during subscribers’ next billing cycle, according to Netflix spokesperson MoMo Zhou.

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  • Emma Roth

    Discovery Plus is raising its prices

    An image showing the Discovery Plus logo

    An image showing the Discovery Plus logo

    Photo Illustration by Jaque Silva/NurPhoto via Getty Images

    Discovery Plus is going up in price, with its ad-supported plan going from $4.99 to $5.99 per month, and its ad-free plan increasing from $8.99 to $9.99 per month. The price hike will go into effect immediately for new subscribers, while existing subscribers will see the change during their next billing cycle or after February 7th.

    Discovery Plus raised the price of its ad-free plan for the first time in October 2023. Following the launch of Max, Discovery Plus remained a standalone subscription despite most of its content appearing in Warner Bros. Discovery’s flagship streaming service. Discovery Plus has a mix of shows — ranging from ultra binge-worthy to ultra cringe-worthy — from channels like HGTV, TLC, the Discovery Channel, Investigation Discovery, Magnolia Network, and others.

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  • Wes Davis

    YouTube TV is letting some subscribers hold off that price hike

    Illustration of a YouTube logo with geometric background

    Illustration of a YouTube logo with geometric background

    Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

    YouTube announced a hefty subscription price increase this week that will shoot the monthly cost up by $10 to $82.99 on January 13th for existing members (or now, if you sign up today). Some subscribers are staving off the hike using the time-honored tradition of threatening to cancel, as one Verge reader indicated in a comment on our original story about the price hike.

    That’s backed up by users in a Reddit thread that 9to5Google spotted, several of whom reported getting the offer to keep paying $72.99 for six more months when they tried to cancel their subscriptions, although some report that didn’t work for them. Some who did get to keep the old price say it happened only when they logged in using a web browser on their computer and pushed through offers to pause their subscription instead.

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  • Umar Shakir

    Sling TV’s streaming TV price goes up by $5.99 next month

    A photo of the Sling TV and Dish logos at CES 2015.

    A photo of the Sling TV and Dish logos at CES 2015.

    Photo by Chris Welch / The Verge

    Sling TV is increasing its monthly subscription prices by $5.99 for all of its plans starting in December. The streaming TV provider said “rising costs” are to blame for the price hikes without specifying why — presumably, not all six of those bucks are intended to pay for its “arcade” library of interactive games that just added Pac-Man and Trivia Crack.

    There are two packages: Sling Orange, which includes Disney and ESPN networks, and Sling Blue, which includes Fox and NBC programming that previously cost $40 per month, individually. Now, they will cost $45.99 per month. There’s also the combo Sling Orange plus Blue, which offers a mix of both packages for $55 per month — but will go up to $61. Current subscribers will see the price change with their billing date on or after December 20th.

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  • Sean Hollister

    GeForce Now Founders won’t be subject to Nvidia’s upcoming 100-hour-a-month data cap.

    No, Founders memberships will still have unlimited playtime hours for life, as long as there is no lapse in their membership.

    Also:

    Founders can upgrade to Ultimate and return to their prior Founders benefits at any time without penalty, as long as there is no lapse in their payments.

  • Wes Davis

    YouTube Premium subscribers are reporting price hikes around the globe

    YouTube logo on an abstract background

    YouTube logo on an abstract background

    Illustration: Alex Castro / The Verge

    YouTube is telling Premium subscribers outside the US that they’ll be paying more for the service soon, social media users began reporting over the weekend. So far, the higher prices are being reported in regions that include the EU, the Middle East, and South America, according to Android Authority.

    The price increases affect both individual and family plans. In some EU countries, people have said they were told their family plans will be going from €17.99 to €25.99 (or €11.99 to €13.99 for individuals) starting on November 7th. Posts on social media are reporting similar increases in places like Singapore, Colombia, and Saudi Arabia. A Reddit user is tracking the amounts in one thread.

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  • Emma Roth

    Disney’s password-sharing crackdown starts ‘in earnest’ this September

    Disney logo

    Disney logo

    Illustration by Nick Barclay / The Verge

    Disney Plus will soon no longer let you share your password with people outside your household. During an earnings call on Wednesday, Disney CEO Bob Iger said the crackdown will kick off “in earnest” this September.

    The timeline for Disney’s password-sharing crackdown has been a bit confusing so far. In February, Disney announced plans to roll out paid sharing and also began notifying users about the change. It then launched paid sharing in a “few countries” in June but provided no information on when it would reach the US.

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  • Charles Pulliam-Moore

    The price of Disney Plus is about to go up

    Disney Plus ESPN Plus Hulu bundle

    Disney Plus ESPN Plus Hulu bundle

    Image: Disney

    The next phase of Disney’s plan to make its streaming services profitable is another round of price hikes served up with more news and new playlist features.

    Disney is rolling out a new wave of price hikes that its subscribers will probably be none too pleased to be hit with. Beginning October 17th, individual monthly and annual plans for Disney Plus, Hulu, and ESPN are all going up.

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