Netflix is scrapping its cheapest ad-free plan in Australia from next week
Share and Follow

STREAMING giant Netflix will scrap its cheapest ad-free plan in Australia from as soon as next week.

The shock move comes as the company looks to grow its revenue by pushing its more frugal customers to pay for a plan with ads.

Netflix is scrapping its cheapest ad-free plan in Australia from next week

Netflix is scrapping its cheapest ad-free plan in Australia from next weekCredit: Reuters

At $10.99 a month, the basic plan is the cheapest ad-free option currently available to Netflix subscribers.

But new and rejoining Australian streamers will soon need to pay at least an extra $6 to sign up for uninterrupted viewing: a total of $16.99 for the standard ad-free plan or $22.99 for the premium ad-free plan.

Those keen to keep their costs down can sign up for a standard plan with ads for $6.99 a month.

Customers who already have the basic $10.99 plan – the only plan that offers a reduced video quality and streaming resolution of less than 1080p – will be able to continue using it.

Netflix revealed the major change on Tuesday in a letter to shareholders after enacting it in the US, UK, Canada, and Italy.

The letter read: “We’ll be making the same change in Germany, Spain, Japan, Mexico, Australia, and Brazil next week.

“Our immediate priority is building our ad membership so that Netflix becomes an essential buy for advertisers.”

The change will take effect in Australia from Monday, October 23.

Netflix said “building our ad membership so that Netflix becomes an essential buy for advertisers, which is key for advertising to become material to our business” was its “immediate priority”.

The phasing out of the basic plan for new and rejoining members in the US, UK, Italy, and Canada has so far boosted memberships where viewers have to endure ads by “nearly 70 per cent quarter-over-quarter”, according to the streaming giant.

Netflix also announced pricing hikes for some plans in the UK, US, and France would effect immediately.

It hiked the price of its premium subscription package in the UK following rumours of a rise earlier this month.

In a financial update today, it also shared its controversial crackdown on password sharing had won it 8.8 million new subscribers.

Almost nine million households signed on to Netflix between July and September of this year, marking the biggest jump in subscription since the early Covid-19 lockdowns in 2020.

Share and Follow
You May Also Like

Karen Read NOT GUILTY in murder of cop boyfriend after damning texts and insisting his body was moved

KAREN Read has learned her fate in the trial for the murder…

Lone Brit survivor of Air India disaster says he’ll be racked with guilt for life after missed chance to move bro’s seat

PLANE crash survivor Vishwash Ramesh poses for The Sun as he appears…

Mulvaney warns of safety concerns over White House's new flagpoles

Former White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney on Wednesday raised safety…

The Buss Family is set to sell the Lakers to Mark Walter for a whopping $10 billion

The Buss family, longtime owners of the Lakers franchise, is selling the…

Ryanair plane from UK CRASHES on runway wrecking wing moments after landing at holiday airport leaving Brits terrified

A RYANAIR flight crashed into a barrier and suffered a badly smashed…

NTSB issues urgent safety warning over certain Boeing, Airbus engines

The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) issued an urgent warning on Wednesday…

SNAP work requirement carveouts for vets, homeless caught in crosshairs of Trump bill

Congress could soon put an end to work requirement exemptions for veterans,…

Proposed sale of millions of acres of public land under GOP budget bill prompts backlash

Related video above: Trump and Musk feud continues over ‘Big, Beautiful bill’…