Skip to main content

Netflix’s price hikes will take effect shortly for most subscribers

We knew it was coming, but that doesn’t make it less painful: The price hikes that Netflix announced earlier this year will show up on customers’ invoices starting in May, according to an email the company has been sending out, CNN reports.

Depending on your plan, your monthly Netflix bill will be increased by $1 or $2. The least-expensive basic plan will ring in at $9 per month instead of $8, while the premium plan jumps from $14 per month to $16. The standard plan, which sits between these options, will be $13 per month instead of $11. Some existing subscribers are already paying the higher fees and anyone who signed up for the streaming video service since the new prices were announced, has been paying the new rates since starting their subscription.

No one enjoys paying more for content — after all, Netflix’s low monthly fees are one of the biggest reasons it’s seen as a major force in the trend toward cord-cutting — but there appears to be quite a bit of wiggle room for streaming services like Netflix to raise prices. According to a recent survey that looked at reasons why people stick with or cancel their streaming media subscriptions, 64 percent of U.S. subscribers, and 55 percent of U.K. subscribers said that, “having plenty of interesting content to watch” was the top reason for sticking around.

If that’s the case, Netflix’s strategy of raising its prices in order to fund the creation of more high-quality, original content might actually keep subscribers around longer, rather than see them leave over higher prices. Still, the price hike opens the door for competitors to try to snatch customers away from the streaming behemoth, and Hulu was the first to do so. Soon after Netflix’s announcement, Hulu cut the price of its least expensive, ad-supported tier of service by $2, bringing it down to $6 per month — $3 less than Netflix’s basic plan, and less than half the price of its standard subscription.

While Hulu might be fighting for Netflix’s least profitable customers, Netflix will soon have to contend with Apple TV Plus, the upcoming streaming service from Apple that is looking like it will be a draw for Netflix’s highest paying subscribers.

Editors' Recommendations

Simon Cohen
Contributing Editor, A/V
Simon Cohen covers a variety of consumer technologies, but has a special interest in audio and video products, like spatial…
10 shows that aren’t worth the hype
Ayo Edebiri and Jeremy Allen White as Sydney and Carmy cookin in a kitchen in The Bear.

Are we still living in the so-called Golden Age of Television? However confusing as the term might be right now, it's undeniable that both streaming and cable produced some all-time great shows in the past decade, like Succession and Veep. For its part, the late '90s and 2000s kickstarted the trend with outright masterpieces like The Sopranos and Six Feet Under.

And yet, while many of these shows live up to the hype, and others are accurately rated, considering their overall quality, a few can be described as absurdly overrated. These TV offerings have received overwhelming acclaim, usually within a determined period, with both critics and audiences lauding them as absolute triumphs of the small screen. However, hindsight will reveal their acclaim is vastly overblown, and, at the end of the day, they're really not worth the hype.
Parks and Recreation (2009-2015)

Read more
The best Netflix original series right now
The cast of 3 Body Problem.

If Netflix is slowing down the release of its original series this year, it's doing a good job of hiding it. While there have been a few weeks in 2024 where Netflix relied on shows created by rival studios, March has been a big month for the streamer. 3 Body Problem, The Gentlemen, and Girls5eva have all debuted on the list of the most popular shows on Netflix. That's a powerhouse lineup that's going to be hard to top for the rest of the year.

Thankfully, those are only three of the shows that are on our roundup of the best Netflix original series right now. Netflix has a very strong library of originals that can keep TV fans busy for the foreseeable future. And the great thing about having so many options is that there's almost always something new binge on Netflix.

Read more
Netflix’s 3 Body Problem is missing the one thing that made Game of Thrones great
Ye Wenjie sits in front of a radio dish controller in 3 Body Problem.

Netflix's 3 Body Problem isn't just the streaming service's long-awaited adaptation of the acclaimed Chinese science fiction novel of the same name by Liu Cixin. It's also Game of Thrones showrunners David Benioff and D.B. Weiss' follow-up to their HBO smash hit. In many ways, the Netflix series, which Benioff and Weiss co-created with Alexander Woo, is a worthy successor to a show like Thrones. Like that game-changing HBO drama, it's an adaptation of the kind of famously complex source material that many understandably believed to be unadaptable.

To Benioff, Weiss, and Woo's credit, they prove that's not true across 3 Body Problem's debut eight-episode season. Together, the trio and their collaborators successfully streamline the science-driven narrative of Cixin's original novel, turning it into an episodic story that is both easily digestible and propulsive. While 3 Body Problem gets a lot right, though, it's missing the one thing that made Game of Thrones such a beloved show in the first place. To put it frankly, its characters just aren't all that memorable.
A rich foundation
3 Body Problem | Official Trailer | Netflix

Read more