Netflix’s $19.99 plan narrows the ad-tier revenue gap
Netflix's recent price hike of its standard ad-free plan to $19.99 highlights a shift in streaming economics, where highly engaged ad-supported subscribers can generate more revenue than ad-free users. This model, driven by viewership-based ad sales and consumer resistance to higher subscription costs, is becoming a primary driver for new subscriber growth across streaming platforms. Companies like Netflix are actively working to close the revenue gap between ad-free and ad-supported tiers, aiming for indifference in subscriber value as ad revenue becomes a key monetization priority.
Key Takeaways
- EDO’s Kevin Krim said an ad-supported subscriber can generate about $12.89 after 10 hours of viewing, $16.79 after 20 hours, and nearly $25 after about 41 hours.
- Netflix says advertising revenue is on track to reach $3 billion in 2026, up 2x year-over-year, according to spokesperson Adrian Zamora.
- Netflix has more than 325 million subscribers globally and viewers watched more than 95 billion hours in the first half of 2025.
- Antenna said 71% of new subscriber growth over the past two years came from ad-supported tiers, and about 65% of that growth was from new-to-platform users.
- Deloitte found average household streaming spend held at about $69 per month, while 61% of consumers would cancel if prices rose by $5.
Why It Matters
Netflix’s price move puts a concrete number on where streaming economics are heading: ad-supported viewers can now approach or exceed the revenue from ad-free plans when viewing time is high enough. That changes how platforms value engagement, not just subscription price. It also explains why Netflix, Hulu, Paramount+, Warner Bros. Discovery, and Comcast all keep pushing ad tiers. The next data point to watch is Netflix’s ad revenue run rate versus its 2026 target of $3 billion, alongside how much viewing time shifts to the $8.99 plan.
Read full article at cnbc.com
