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Netflix raises prices for every subscription tier by up to 12.5 percent

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Why This Matters

Netflix's recent price increases reflect its ongoing efforts to invest in content, enhance user experience, and introduce new features amid a competitive streaming landscape. For consumers, this means paying more for continued access to a broad range of entertainment, but also highlights the company's focus on innovation and service improvements. The price hikes underscore the broader trend of rising costs in the streaming industry as providers seek to differentiate themselves through content quality and technological advancements.

Key Takeaways

Netflix isn’t preparing for a multibillion acquisition anymore, but it’s still raising prices.

As first spotted by Android Authority today, Netflix now lists its ad-supported plan as costing $9 per month, up from $8/month. The Standard, ad-free plan went up from $18/month to $20/month, and the Premium ad-free plan (which supports viewing from four, instead of two, devices simultaneously, 4K, and spatial audio) went from $25/month to $27/month.

For comparison, Disney+ starts at $12/month with commercials and $19/month without.

Netflix’s last price hike was in January 2025, when subscribers started paying up to 16 percent more. Before that, Netflix’s most recent price hike was in 2023.

Netflix told TechCrunch that the new prices are due to improvements to its “wide range of entertainment” and to the service.

The needs to pay for content and introduce new features are commonly cited by streaming services charging more. Since Netflix’s prior price hike, it has added HDR10+ support and a new type of subtitles that only writes out what people are saying. Since last increasing subscription fees, the world’s largest streaming service provider has also revamped its TV app and has announced plans for an updated mobile app, streaming traditional broadcast channels, and, less excitingly, showing AI-generated advertisements.