Skip to main content

Netflix considering ad-supported tier at lower price

On the day that it reported the loss of subscribers for the first time in more than a decade, Netflix has revealed it is considering an ad-supported tier for a lower subscription fee.

Netflix co-founder and co-CEO Reed Hastings made the revelation during a conference call with investors on Tuesday, April 19.

Netflix Home Screen.
Phil Nickinson/Digital Trends

Hastings acknowledged that his opposition to an ad-supported tier has been well documented, but said a strong belief in consumer choice could, after all, persuade him to backtrack. Witnessing the exodus of 200,000 subscribers in the three-month period ending March 31 may also have nudged him toward accepting the idea.

“Those who have followed Netflix know that I have been against the complexity of advertising and a big fan of the simplicity of subscription,” Hastings said. “But as much as I am a fan of that, I am a bigger fan of consumer choice, and allowing consumers who would like to have a lower price and are advertising-tolerant to get what they want makes a lot of sense.”

However, Hastings added that an ad-supported service wouldn’t likely land for at least a year, meaning that for now subscribers are stuck with paying $10 a month for the basic tier, $15.50 for the standard tier, and $20 for the premium service.

Rivals such as Hulu and Peacock already offer an ad-supported option, while Disney+ recently announced it too will be adding an ad-supported tier for U.S.-based customers later this year, followed by an international rollout in 2023. Amazon Prime, meanwhile, bundles lots of other services with its own video streaming offering, with the entire package currently costing $139 per year. Apple TV+ has no ad-supported plan, with subscribers required to pay $5 per month.

Hastings also said on Tuesday that Netflix expects to lose a further 2 million subscribers in the current quarter. He put the losses down to a number factors such as increased competition from rivals, the war in Ukraine, and password sharing, a practice that Hastings said some 100 million households are currently engaged in.

He added that a surge in signups during the pandemic had “obscured the picture” as people begin to go out more following the vaccine rollout.

Whether Netflix’s proposed ad-supported service will be a success depends largely on how much the company decides to charge, as well as its ability to maintain an attractive library of content that beats, or at least matches, that offered by its competitors.

Planning to cancel Netflix? Here’s how to do it. Alternatively, if you’re a fully committed Netflix subscriber and looking for stuff to watch, check out Digital Trends’ top 50 movies for April.

Editors' Recommendations

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Peacock is raising its prices this summer
The Peacock app icon on Apple TV.

Don't act surprised. Don't act is if you're shocked that Peacock — the streaming service from NBCUniversal that's home to the larger NBC universe, the wildly popular Premier League, and the 2024 Summer Olympics — is increasing its prices just in time for a major sporting event.

Because it's happening.

Read more
The best Netflix original series right now
A man behind a bar, a heavyset woman sitting there and pointing at him, both smiling in a scene from Baby Reindeer.

Compared to 2023, Netflix has clearly pulled back on its aggressive rollout of original series. But the slowdown that subscribers are currently experiencing may be due in part to last year's Hollywood strikes. Hopefully. we'll have more shows to choose from in May.

This month, we're putting the spotlight on Baby Reindeer, Ripley, and Dead Boy Detectives. Of those three, only Baby Reindeer ranks among the most popular shows on Netflix. Keep reading for our complete rundown of the best Netflix original series right now, and you'll find something fun to binge.

Read more
Netflix is streaming the craziest action movie of 2024. Here’s why I loved it
A man floating in air kicks another man in the face in City Hunter.

This month seems to be the time to release action movies that color outside the lines. We've already had Dev Patel's Monkey Man, a messy, throw-everything-at-the-wall action movie that blends intricate fight sequences and on-the-nose social commentary in an entertaining package that will surely gain cult status in the near future. Just this weekend, Boy Kills World dished out loads of cartoon violence and over-the-top gore in a bid for John Wick-level fandom. Both movies bend or break the rules of reality to deliver quickly cut fight scenes that push the boundaries of the genre, all in an attempt to one-up the high standards set by the best movies in the Mission: Impossible and Fast and Furious franchises.

Yet the best of the April bunch is the one that has the lowest profile. City Hunter doesn't star anyone you'd recognize like It actor Bill Skarsgård in Boy Kills World and hasn't been backed by an extensive marketing campaign like Universal's Monkey Man. But the movie is a blast; it's like putting Pop Rocks in a can of Mountain Dew and chasing it down with a couple of Pixy Sticks. It's ludicrous, immature, and totally unrealistic. It's also my favorite action movie of 2024. Here's why you need to stream City Hunter pronto.
It's an adaptation of a massively popular franchise

Read more