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Netflix stops offering basic membership plan in US

Netflix pumps the brakes on its basic membership without ads in the U.S., according to the streaming giant's Help Center page. The U.K. is also facing the change.

Netflix is pumping the brakes on its basic membership without ads in the U.S.

"The Basic plan is no longer available for new or rejoining members," reads the language on the streaming giant's Help Center page for the U.S. on Wednesday. "If you are currently on the Basic plan, you can remain on this plan until you change plans or cancel your account."

That notice about dropping the $9.99-per-month basic membership also appeared on the U.K. webpage about subscriptions and their prices. Canada previously faced the same change.

With the basic Netflix membership gone, two ad-free options – Standard at $15.49 per month and Premium at $19.99 per month – plus its Standard with Ads option remain available for members to choose from, according to the Help Center page. The ad-supported plan has a price $3 cheaper than the now-unavailable basic one.

NETFLIX SUBSCRIPTIONS JUMP, PASSWORD CRACKDOWN PAYS OFF

Netflix, which is set to disclose its second-quarter results in the afternoon, said to FOX Business that the company’s "starting prices of $6.99 in the US and £4.99 in the UK are lower than the competition and provide great value to consumers given the breadth and quality of our catalog."

America, the U.K. and 10 other countries received access to Netflix’s ad-supported plan, which comes with a $6.99 monthly price tag, roughly eight months ago. It had drawn some 5 million active users by May, FOX Business previously reported.

By the end of Netflix’s first quarter, its total number of subscribers had been hovering around 232.5 million, rising 1.75 million from the final three-month period of 2022.

NETFLIX PASSWORD-SHARING CRACKDOWN PROMPTS AWKWARD ACCOUNT BREAKUPS

U.S. users of Netflix became subject to the streaming giant’s new policy that an account "is for people who live together in a single household" in May. That required people outside the subscriber’s home to get their own or become an "extra member" on the account they were already using, a move meant to cut down on the 100 million households that the streaming service said have been engaging in password-sharing.

Netflix has tied a $7.99 monthly fee to having each "extra member," with the standard plan afforded one and the premium getting a maximum of two.

NETFLIX IN SWEET SPOT DESPITE HOLLYWOOD STRIKE

Shares of Netflix’s stock were trading at around $476 as of Wednesday afternoon, meaning they have climbed more than 136% in the past 12 months.

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