Bad news, everyone: Apple TV Plus, one of the last bastions of ad-free cost-effective streaming services, is getting a big price hike.
As first reported by Bloomberg, Apple is raising the price of one of the world’s best streaming services. Even worse, it’ll cost almost double what you’re currently paying to use the streaming platform. Well, in the US anyway. As Gurman pointed out on X (formerly Twitter), the monthly cost of Apple TV Plus is going up from $6.99 to an unpleasant $9.99 – a 31% jump on what users currently pay. Signing up to a yearly subscription will also set you back an extra $30 as it’s going up from $69 to $99.
NEW on @TheTerminal: Apple is raising the price of Apple TV+ from $6.99 to $9.99 (and $69 to $99 annually), Apple Arcade from $4.99 to $6.99 and News+ from $9.99 to $12.99. Apple One bundle prices also going up + hikes are coming internationally.October 25, 2023
It’s currently unclear if Apple TV Plus’ cost will rise in the UK and Australia. We’ve reached out to Apple’s British and Australian divisions to learn more and we’ll update this article if we hear back.
Unsurprisingly, the price increase means it’ll be more expensive to watch the best Apple TV Plus shows and best Apple TV Plus movies moving forward. And, as someone who has vouched for how great the platform’s back catalog is, it’s a price hike that’s really frustrated me.
Not only is (or, rather, was) Apple’s streamer one of the cheapest services around, but it’s also home to some of the best sci-fi TV series to launch in recent months and years, including Foundation, Severance, and Silo. Critically acclaimed and award-winning non-sci-fi shows, such as Ted Lasso and Blackbird, are also absolutely worth watching.
The streamer is also going to be the exclusive place to watch some of 2023’s critically acclaimed and highly anticipated new movies, too, such as Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon and Ridley Scott’s Napoleon. If Apple wants to entice people to stream these brilliant shows and films on its platform, what good is it going to do raising the price of its monthly and yearly subscriptions at such a key juncture in its history?