Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Audio / Video
  3. News

It’s just $1, but Netflix is again raising the hit on your streaming wallet

Our service has improved lately. Now, you pay!

Add as a preferred source on Google
Netflix logo is seen displayed on a phone screen while the desktop app is shown on a laptop
Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images

This isn’t really news anymore, but it’s a repeating cycle. So, here we are, again. Netflix has just — quietly, mind you — raised the price of its subscription bundles. For starters, the base tier that occasionally throws a few ads in your face now costs $8.99 per month, up from the $7.99 monthly fee.

What else is going up?

In the natural order of things, “thou shalt pay more to see fewer ads.” Netflix is living by that code pretty seriously. Naturally, it has hiked the price of its Standard and Premium plans, too, ones that spare you the pain of watching ads midway through a deep binge-watching session. The latter plan used to cost $24.99, but it’s ready to hurt your monthly subscription bill by rising to $26.99. The Standard (without ads) plan is jumping from $17.99 to $19.99 moving forward.

But that’s not all. Remember Netflix fuming at moochers and rolling out a strategy that lets you ethically add more members to your current plan? Well, now, if you want to add a new pair of eyes to your Standard plan, it’s going to cost $7.99 per head each month, up from $6.99 not too long ago. Of course, they would still see ads, just like you. For skipping ads, you must cough up $9.99 each month for new additions.

Recommended Videos

If you and your co-subscriber want to avoid the bane of ads while living the Premium plan life, the hit of adding a new member has been raised from $8.99 to $9.99 per month. It’s just a dollar, or two, but the hike is pretty much here. And if the world of techno-capitalism has taught me anything, there’s no hope for a rollback to merrier (read: less expensive) times.

But why?

Well, Netflix told TechCrunch that the latest price hike is a subtle tax for improving its service in recent times and raising the quality bar. It’s a vague explanation, one that shouldn’t have been uttered with as much confidence. But here we are, regardless.

As far as the new pricing structure goes, it goes into effect for new subscribers starting March 26, while existing customers will face the one-dollar wrath in the coming months. As a sweet gesture of thoughtful customer care, Netflix will inform users a month in advance, via email, about the rising prices.

If it comes as any consolation, Netflix is also home to a terrific slate of games. Maybe, it’s finally time to tap into some of those gems and truly milk your subscription spending? I’ll highly recommend “Red Dead Redemption,” “TMNT: Shredder’s Revenge,” “Dead Cells,” “Street Fighter IV CE,” “Oxenfree,” “WWE 2K25: Netflix Edition,” and “Into the Breach.”

Nadeem Sarwar
Nadeem is the Managing Editor at Digital Trends.
Tidal lays down the rules for AI music. I wish Spotify and everyone else would follow
Tidal app showing on iPhone 15 Pro.

Every week, the AI music problem is getting increasingly hard to ignore, especially for streaming platforms. Deezer reported that 44% of all new music uploaded to its platform daily is now AI-generated; that's almost half the songs.

Spotify relabeled and tightened its AI policies last September, while Apple Music announced a tagging approach in March. However, the subscription-based artist-first music platform Tidal has done something none of them did. 

Read more
Netflix just got a whole lot more irritating if you share a screen in a household
Every profile will soon need its own email address, adding another hurdle for households that share a TV.
Netflix on TV couple watching

Netflix's password-sharing crackdown isn't over just yet. The streaming giant is now rolling out another change that could make shared household accounts a little more cumbersome, this time by asking every profile on an account to have its own email address. While the move isn't designed to stop families from sharing a subscription, it does add another layer of identity verification that many users probably weren't asking for.

Netflix wants every profile to have its own identity

Read more
In the last hours of Prime Day, I found the best deals to save you the regret of missing out
A few more hours, a lot of good deals, and no time left to overthink it.
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Prime Day 2026 officially ends today, and while some deals are already sold out, I've sifted through the entire website to find the best ones that are still live. Below are the picks I'd confidently put my own money on. They include everything from mid-range Android smartphones to flagship foldables, bone-conduction earbuds to Bose, and smartwatches across every price bracket. Act fast, before the clock runs out.

Best Amazon Prime Day deals on smartphones

Read more