Amazon is bringing ads to Prime Video – the ad-free option will cost $2.99 a month extra

Amazon is bringing ads to Prime Video – the ad-free option will cost .99 a month extra


Rafael Henrique | Lightrocket | Getty Images

Ads are coming to Amazon‘s Prime Video.

The company announced Friday that its streaming service – a part of Prime subscriptions that cost $14.99 a month – will now have limited ads in its TV series and movies.

Advertising on Prime Video, known for shows such as “The Boys” and “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel,” will roll out in the U.S. and other cities in early 2024, with other countries to follow later in the year. If U.S. customers don’t want commercials, they will have to pay an additional $2.99 a month. (Live events and sports will continue to feature ads in this tier, the company said in its announcement.)

Prime customers will get an email in the weeks leading up to the advertising rollout, which will include the option to sign up for the ad-free tier.

“To continue investing in compelling content and keep increasing that investment over a long period of time, starting in early 2024, Prime Video shows and movies will include limited advertisements,” the company said in a post on Friday.

Amazon said it plans to have “meaningfully fewer ads than linear TV and other streaming providers.”

Prime Video will now join rival streaming services, including Netflix, Warner Bros. Discovery‘s Max and Disney‘s Hulu and Disney+, that are leaning on advertising. The ad-supported options are not only giving consumers a cheaper option as the list of streaming apps grows, but also bringing in an additional revenue source.

Media companies in particular have been trying a variety of ways to make the streaming business profitable, from advertising to password-sharing crackdowns to cost-cutting.

Streaming behemoth Netflix switched gears late last year and began offering a cheaper, ad-supported plan. Netflix was slow to embrace advertising, but as subscriber growth slowed, the company instituted the option in an effort to boost revenue.

The company recently removed its cheapest, ad-free plan in a push to get more sign-ups for its ad option. Company executives have said the economics of its ad plan were higher than the basic plan, and that advertising is incremental to Netflix’s revenue and profit.



Source

High Noon recalls some 12-packs, saying they may contain Celsius energy drink cans filled with vodka seltzer
Business

High Noon recalls some 12-packs, saying they may contain Celsius energy drink cans filled with vodka seltzer

High Noon vodka seltzer and Celsius energy drinks. Kevin Carter | David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images High Noon has issued a nationwide recall of one of its popular vodka seltzer drinks, saying some packages may contain Celsius energy drink cans filled with the alcoholic beverage. The cans, labeled as Celsius Astro Vibe […]

Read More
Apartment rents drop in July as vacancies move to multiyear high
Business

Apartment rents drop in July as vacancies move to multiyear high

A sign on the side of a building in Hell’s Kitchen, New York City, advertising an apartment is available for rent through a real estate broker.  Deb Cohn-Orbach | UCG | Universal Images Group | Getty Images The massive surge of new apartment supply in the last few years is still being absorbed, and that […]

Read More
Ford Motor is set to report earnings after the bell. Here’s what Wall Street expects
Business

Ford Motor is set to report earnings after the bell. Here’s what Wall Street expects

The Ford display is seen at the New York International Auto Show on April 16, 2025. Danielle DeVries | CNBC Ford Motor is set to report its second-quarter earnings after the markets close Wednesday as investors watch for any changes to its full-year guidance, which the automaker suspended in May due to President Donald Trump’s […]

Read More