Amazon will increase the price of its annual Prime plan effective on May 11 | Amazon.
Amazon is increasing the price of its Prime membership from $99 to $119 starting on May 11.
The company just announced the price increase on its first quarter earnings call, attributing the spike to the service's rising costs, and noting that this was its first price hike since March 2014.
Amazon Prime, which has more than 100 million paid members worldwide, gives members free two-day shipping on lots of products, as well as access to exclusive TV shows, movies, and music.
New users will have to pay $119 for Prime starting on May 11, though existing Prime members will have until June 16 to renew their membership at the current $99 price-point. The move comes only a few months after Amazon raised Prime's monthly membership 18 percent, from $10.99 per month to $12.99 per month.
To make membership more attractive, the company has poured money into original content and football streaming, with analysts estimating that it spent $4.5 billion on non-sports programming in 2017. CEO Jeff Bezos has even quipped that Amazon was the first company to use a Golden Globe to sell toilet paper after its show "Transparent" won the award in 2015.
Here's what Amazon's chief financial officer Brian Olsavsky said about Prime's new price on the earnings call:
"The value of Prime to customers has never been greater. And the cost is also high, as we pointed out especially with shipping options and digital benefits, we continue to see rises in costs. So effective May 11, we're going to increase the price of our U.S. annual plan from $99 to $119 for new members. Prime provides a unique combination of benefits, and we continue to invest in making this Prime program even more valuable for our members. As a reminder, we haven't increased the U.S. annual price Prime since our single increase, which was in March of 2014."
While Olsavsky cites rising costs, he doesn't provide information on exactly how much Prime costs the company per user, though Bezos has famously said that Amazon is a company that always tries to figure out how to charge people less, not more.
In Amazon's first quarter earnings, its "subscription services revenue," which includes Prime memberships, grew 60 percent to $3.1 billion and its earnings-per-share more than doubled since last year.
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