Netflix quietly updated its pricing page on March 26, raising subscription costs across all three of its tiers. The increase takes effect immediately for new subscribers and will roll out over the coming weeks for existing members.
This is the second price hike in less than two years. Netflix last raised prices in January 2025. Before that, the previous increase was in October 2023.
Netflix price increases
Here is what every plan costs now.
- Standard with Ads: Now $8.99 per month, up from $7.99. This is only the second time Netflix has raised the price of this tier since it launched.
- Standard (no ads): Now $19.99 per month, up from $17.99, an increase of $2.
- Premium (no ads, up to four streams, Ultra HD): Now $26.99 per month, up from $24.99, also a $2 increase.
- Extra member add-on (ad-supported): Now $6.99 per month, up from $5.99.
- Extra member add-on (ad-free): Now $9.99 per month, up from $8.99.
Netflix said in a statement that the changes reflect its continued investment in content. “Our approach remains the same: We continue offering a range of prices and plans to meet a variety of needs, and as we deliver more value to our members we are updating our prices to enable us to reinvest in quality entertainment and improve their experience.”
Why Netflix can keep hiking the cost of subscriptions
The price increases come from a position of strength. According to its Q4 earnings, Netflix ended the quarter with 325 million paid subscribers globally. Q4 revenue was $12.05 billion, up 18% year over year. For the full year 2025, the company posted $45.2 billion in revenue, up 16% from the prior year.
The advertising business has become a meaningful contributor. Ad revenue grew more than 2.5 times in 2025 compared to 2024, crossing $1.5 billion for the full year.
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Netflix has projected that ad revenue will roughly double again in 2026. That trajectory gives the company a second major revenue engine alongside subscriptions, which reduces its dependence on raising prices to grow revenue.
For 2026, Netflix has guided for total revenue of $50.7 billion to $51.7 billion, representing 12% to 14% growth. Content spending is rising to $20 billion. The price increases feed directly into that investment plan.
The Warner Bros. context
The timing is notable. Netflix walked away from its bid to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery last month, declining to counter Paramount Skydance’s offer of $31 per share, CNBC reported. As a result, Netflix received a $2.8 billion breakup fee.
Rather than pursuing a transformative acquisition, Netflix is doubling down on its own content and platform. The price increase is part of that strategy.
Co-CEOs Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters offered an explanation when sharing the Warner decision. “We will continue to do what we’ve done for more than 20 years as a public company: delight our members, profitably grow our business, and drive long-term shareholder value.”
Netflix’s price increase is part of a strategy to double down on its own content and platform.
Boivin/Getty Images
What this means for Netflix subscribers
For the average Netflix household, the impact depends on their specific subscription plan.
- Subscribers on the ad-supported plan will pay $12 more per year.
- Subscribers on the Standard plan will pay $24 more per year.
- Subscribers on the Premium plan will also pay $24 more per year.
Netflix has historically absorbed price hike churn quickly. Even after the January 2025 price increase, the company added roughly 19 million paid subscribers across the full year 2025.
The streamer’s content lineup is a key reason. In 2026, Netflix is investing in live events, video podcasts, gaming, and major returning titles alongside WWE Raw, which airs weekly on the platform.
For subscribers looking to manage costs, the Standard with Ads plan at $8.99 remains the lowest-priced option. The gap between that tier and the ad-free Standard plan is now $11 per month, giving budget-conscious viewers a strong incentive to tolerate ads.
That gap is part of Netflix’s strategy to push subscribers toward the ad tier, which generates revenue from both the subscription fee and the advertising inventory.
Subscribers should expect an email notification before the new pricing applies to their account. Netflix confirmed the changes take effect immediately for new sign-ups, with existing members seeing the update at their next billing cycle in the coming weeks.
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