Netflix Basic With Ads Plan Pricing, Launch Date Revealed

Netflix is about to launch a new package. The streaming service, which has seen subscription costs increase drastically since it launched, is looking now to a cheaper model. But the new discount service does come with a catch: You’ll have to watch a few ads in between all of your content.

The idea of an ad-supported version of Netflix isn’t new andhas been met with some skepticism. It’s also something other streaming services already do. Hulu is one example, and it averages more ads than Netflix initially intends. It’s worth pointing out Netflix may increase the amount of ads it runs as time goes on. Its other packages will be unaffected by the change, so if you’re not trying to save a few dollars, and you hate ads, you still have three options.

Dahmer on Netflix

When it launched, the Netlfix was priced at $8. By 2014, three options were available: a “premium” service priced at $12, the “standard” service at $9, and a “basic” package which retained the $8 price point (viaVox). There were some slight differences, but none of them were related to content. Differences mainly centered on the amount of people who could use the account simultaneously, and the quality of the streams themselves — with “basic” streaming being limited to “SD” and “premium” users getting a 4K option. The prices of all three tiers have increased over the years, withNetflixcharging $9.99 per month for the basic plan, $15.49 for standard, and $19.99 for premium. If that all seems a bit too much, you’ll be happy to know their new “basic with ads” plan is the cheapest the company has ever launched.

This is the cheapest Netflix has ever been

Ads may be annoying, but at $6.99, the new basic with ads package is the cheapest rate the company has ever offered in the United States. It’s essentially the same settings as the current basic package, but $3 cheaper and includes an “average of 4 to 5 minutes of ads per hour” according toa statementissued by the streaming service. Pricing details for other locations are yet to be released, but the company has said basic with ads will be an option in 11 other countries: Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Korea, Mexico, Spain and the UK.