Amazon puts 4K behind a $4.99 “Ultra” paywall
Amazon has launched Prime Video Ultra in the US, replacing the prior ad-free plan and increasing the add-on price for Prime subscribers to $4.99/month from $2.99 (about a 67% increase). The new tier bundles ad-free viewing with additional features, including making 4K/Ultra HD streaming exclusive to Ultra, increasing simultaneous streams from three to five, and raising offline download limits from 25 to 100.
Key Takeaways
- Prime Video Ultra replaces the prior ad-free plan for US Prime subscribers.
- Ad-free access price increases to $4.99/month from $2.99 (~67% hike).
- 4K/Ultra HD streaming is now exclusive to the Ultra tier.
- Simultaneous streams increase from 3 to 5 on Ultra.
- Offline download limit jumps from 25 to 100 titles on Ultra.
Why It Matters
This is the next phase of “ad-free” unbundling: platforms aren’t just charging to remove ads—they’re turning quality and utility into upsell levers. By gating 4K and boosting household-friendly features (5 streams, 100 downloads), Amazon is effectively converting Prime Video’s premium experience into a higher-ARPU tier while keeping the ad-supported baseline intact. Expect copycats: “4K as a perk” is cleaner than raising base prices and a subtle way to normalize tiered QoE. For engineers and strategists, it also signals more deliberate entitlement logic across devices, DRM profiles, and concurrency controls.
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