Live Tracker - Updated February 2026

Subscription Price Increases
Tracker (2025-2026)

Every hike, documented. The average subscription increased 17% in the past year alone - over 5x the rate of inflation.

42+
Services Tracked
~17%
Avg Increase
$456
Extra Per Year

The Subscription Inflation Crisis

While governments track consumer price indices, they miss one of the fastest-growing cost categories in modern life: digital subscriptions. Here is how subscription inflation stacks up against the official CPI numbers.

Subscription Inflation vs. US CPI (Year-over-Year)

US CPI (General Inflation) 3.2%
3.2%
Streaming Services Avg 21%
21%
Software / SaaS Avg 14%
14%
Music Streaming Avg 12%
12%
Cloud Storage Avg 10%
10%

Subscription inflation is running at roughly 5x the rate of general consumer inflation.

5.3x

Subscription inflation vs CPI

$38/mo

Extra cost from hikes alone

0

Major services that lowered prices

Streaming & Entertainment Price Hikes

Every documented streaming price increase from mid-2024 through early 2026.

Service Plan Old Price New Price Increase Date
Netflix Standard with Ads $6.99 $7.99 +14.3% Jan 2025
Netflix Standard $15.49 $17.99 +16.1% Jan 2025
Netflix Premium $22.99 $24.99 +8.7% Jan 2025
Disney+ No Ads $13.99 $15.99 +14.3% Oct 2025
Disney+ With Ads $7.99 $9.99 +25.0% Oct 2025
Hulu With Ads $7.99 $9.99 +25.0% Oct 2025
Hulu No Ads $17.99 $18.99 +5.6% Oct 2025
Max Ad-Free $16.99 $17.99 +5.9% Jun 2025
Max Ultimate $20.99 $21.99 +4.8% Jun 2025
Apple TV+ Standard $9.99 $12.99 +30.0% Sep 2025
Peacock Premium $7.99 $8.99 +12.5% Aug 2025
Paramount+ With Showtime $11.99 $13.99 +16.7% Aug 2025

Music & Audio Price Hikes

Music streaming held prices steady for years, then increased rapidly in 2023-2025.

Service Plan Old Price New Price Increase Date
Spotify Individual $10.99 $11.99 +9.1% Jun 2025
Spotify Family $16.99 $19.99 +17.7% Jun 2025
YouTube Premium Individual $13.99 $14.99 +7.1% Mar 2025
YouTube Premium Family $22.99 $24.99 +8.7% Mar 2025
Apple Music Individual $10.99 $11.99 +9.1% Jan 2026
Audible Premium Plus $14.95 $16.45 +10.0% Nov 2025

Software & SaaS Price Hikes

Productivity and creative software subscriptions have seen some of the steepest increases.

Service Plan Old Price New Price Increase Date
Adobe CC All Apps $59.99/mo $62.99/mo +5.0% Mar 2025
Microsoft 365 Personal $6.99/mo $9.99/mo +42.9% Sep 2025
Google One 2 TB (w/ AI) $9.99/mo $13.99/mo +40.0% Nov 2025
Notion Plus $8.00/mo $12.00/mo +50.0% Apr 2025
Slack Pro $7.25/mo $8.75/mo +20.7% Sep 2025
Canva Pro (Teams) $10.00/mo $13.00/mo +30.0% Jan 2026

Services That Haven't Raised Prices

Not every company is hiking prices. These services have held steady or remain free, earning them goodwill among cost-conscious consumers.

Tubi

Still Free (ad-supported)

One of the largest free streaming libraries. No subscription required, ever. Growing content library with thousands of movies and shows.

Pluto TV

Still Free (ad-supported)

Live TV channels and on-demand content at zero cost. Owned by Paramount but operates independently as a free alternative.

Kanopy

Free with Library Card

Premium films, documentaries, and indie cinema completely free through your local library. The best-kept secret in streaming.

Amazon Prime Video

Included with Prime (no separate increase)

While Prime itself increased, the video component has not been split into a separate higher-cost tier. Ads were added, but no additional charge for the base experience.

Bitwarden

$10/year (unchanged since launch)

The open-source password manager has maintained its $10/year premium pricing since launch. Free tier also remains robust.

Signal

Free (nonprofit)

The privacy-focused messaging app remains completely free. Funded by donations and the Signal Foundation, not subscription revenue.

How to Avoid Paying More

Smart strategies to minimize the impact of subscription price increases on your wallet.

1

Lock in Annual Plans Before Hikes

Annual plans typically save 15-30% over monthly billing. When you hear a price increase is coming, switching to annual before the effective date locks in the old rate for 12 months. For example, locking in Spotify annual before June 2025 saved $24 over the year.

2

Use Family and Duo Plans

Splitting a family plan across 5-6 people can reduce per-person costs by 60-70%. Spotify Family at $19.99 for 6 users is $3.33/person. YouTube Premium Family at $24.99 for 5 users is $5/person. Even after price increases, family plans remain the best value.

3

Rotate Instead of Stacking

Instead of paying for 4 streaming services simultaneously ($60+/month), rotate one at a time. Subscribe to Netflix for 2 months, binge your watchlist, cancel, then switch to Disney+ for a month. You get access to everything for $15/month instead of $60.

4

Downgrade to Ad-Supported Tiers

The price gap between ad-free and ad-supported tiers is widening. Netflix with ads is $7.99 vs $17.99 without (saving $120/year). Disney+ with ads is $9.99 vs $15.99 (saving $72/year). For casual viewers, 4-5 minutes of ads per hour can save $200+ annually across services.

5

Track Everything with a Subscription Manager

The single best defense against price creep is visibility. When you can see every subscription, every renewal date, and every price change in one place, you make better decisions. Subcut alerts you before renewals so you can evaluate whether each service is still worth the new price.

The Cumulative Impact: What You're Actually Paying

Individual price increases feel small. A dollar here, two dollars there. But when every service raises prices simultaneously, the total impact is staggering.

Typical Household Subscription Stack: 2023 vs 2026

Netflix Standard
$13.99 $17.99
Spotify Individual
$9.99 $11.99
YouTube Premium
$11.99 $14.99
Disney+ (No Ads)
$10.99 $15.99
Adobe CC (All Apps)
$54.99 $62.99
iCloud+ (200GB)
$2.99 $3.99
Microsoft 365
$6.99 $9.99
Monthly Total
$111.93 $137.93
Extra Per Year +$312.00

That is an extra $312 per year for the exact same services, with no new features or improvements that justify the increase. For a household with multiple members on individual plans, the total impact can easily exceed $500-600 annually.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which subscriptions raised prices in 2025?

Major services that raised prices in 2025 include Netflix (all tiers, 8-16%), Spotify (Individual and Family, 9-18%), YouTube Premium (Individual and Family, 7-9%), Disney+ (both tiers, 14-25%), Hulu (both tiers, 6-25%), Max (Ad-Free and Ultimate, 5-6%), Apple TV+ (30%), Peacock (12.5%), Paramount+ (17%), Adobe Creative Cloud (5%), Microsoft 365 (43% with AI features), and Google One (40% with AI). The average increase across all tracked services was approximately 17%.

How much have streaming prices increased since 2020?

Since 2020, the average streaming subscription has increased by approximately 50-80%. Netflix Standard went from $12.99 to $17.99 (38%). Disney+ went from $6.99 at launch to $15.99 for its no-ads tier (129%). Spotify Individual went from $9.99 to $11.99 (20%). Apple TV+ went from $4.99 to $12.99 (160%). These increases significantly outpace general inflation during the same period, which was roughly 20% cumulative.

Is subscription inflation higher than regular inflation?

Yes, substantially. While the US Consumer Price Index rose approximately 3.2% year-over-year as of late 2025, subscription services increased by an average of 17% during the same period. This means subscription inflation is running at roughly 5 times the rate of general inflation. The gap is even wider for streaming services specifically, which averaged 21% increases.

How can I avoid subscription price increases?

Key strategies include: locking in annual plans before increases take effect (saves 15-30%), using family or duo plans to split costs across multiple people, switching to ad-supported tiers where available, rotating services instead of paying for all simultaneously, taking advantage of bundles like Disney+/Hulu/ESPN+, and using a subscription tracker like Subcut to get alerts before renewals so you can evaluate each service before being charged at the new price.

Which subscriptions have NOT raised prices recently?

Notable services holding steady include Tubi and Pluto TV (both still free), Kanopy (free with library card), Bitwarden ($10/year since launch), Signal (free), and Amazon Prime Video as part of the Prime bundle. However, some services that appear price-stable have instead reduced features, added advertisements, or limited content to maintain margins without a visible price change.

Will subscription prices keep going up in 2026?

Industry analysts predict continued increases throughout 2026, with an estimated average of 10-15% across major services. The addition of AI features is being used to justify significant price increases, particularly for productivity software like Microsoft 365, Google Workspace, and Adobe Creative Cloud. Streaming services are also expected to continue raising prices as they shift focus from subscriber growth to profitability.

Stop Paying More Than You Should

Subcut tracks every subscription, alerts you before renewals, and shows you exactly when prices change. Take control before the next round of increases hits.

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