Yes, T-Mobile will cover the latest Netflix price hike, but not for all users

The "Un-carrier's" generosity is not endless, heavily relying on whether you like ads or not.

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T-Mobile remains by far the most generous US carrier when it comes to streaming offers. | Image by PhoneArena
Death, taxes, and price increases for popular streaming services. Those might just be the only guarantees in these most uncertain times we live in, and mere weeks before this year's tax filing deadline, Netflix decided to move all its subscribers one step closer to bankruptcy with something that's essentially become an annual tradition on the platform.

If you get your Netflix service through T-Mobile, you may have hoped the "Un-carrier" would save you from this latest price hike, but while that's reportedly true for the least pretentious users, those on costlier plans are out of luck.

Here's exactly what you'll need to pay on every plan


  • Standard with Ads - $0;
  • Standard - $13 a month;
  • Premium - $20 a month.

To be clear, these are the new Netflix prices for T-Mobile customers enjoying the "Netflix on Us" perk from the nation's 5G leader, and across the board, you'll continue getting some very nice discounts over the $8.99, $19.99, and $26.99 a month normally charged for the ad-supported Standard, no-ads Standard, and Premium plans, respectively.

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Are you happy with how T-Mobile is handling the latest Netflix price hike?
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But as you may have immediately noticed, the three discounts are not the same, saving you 9 bucks a month on Netflix's most affordable plan but only $6.99 if you've chosen to upgrade your service and get rid of ads or get rid of ads and gain 4K Ultra HD streaming support.

T-Mobile subscribers have been treated differently before


If you're wondering where that $2 gap in price cuts comes from, the answer is pretty simple. This is actually the second time T-Mo is only covering a Netflix hike for users on the cheapest plan, so while everyone was saving $6.99 a couple of years ago, the discount has increased to $8.99 in the meantime... for some.


Obviously, it's not difficult to understand why Magenta is making every effort possible to keep your Netflix Standard with Ads service free and thus not have to change the name of one of its most popular deals, but a lot of users on costlier Netflix plans are unhappy about receiving different treatment... again.

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Remember to send some of your anger to the origin of the problem!


Look, I understand that T-Mobile makes you frustrated and angry with so many things of late (from its own price hikes to far-too-frequent data breaches and network outages), but in this particular case, the blame clearly lies primarily with Netflix.

If the streaming giant burned less money on instantly forgettable action movies and distasteful reality shows, perhaps it wouldn't need to constantly charge users more and more to keep investors from abandoning a dying business model.

 

Of course, that seems like a pipe dream when this year's total content spending is expected to hit $20 billion (yes, with a "b") after an already obscene budget of $18 billion in 2025 that only generated a handful of undeniable global hits (Frankenstein, Adolescence, maybe Wake Up Dead Man).

How is T-Mobile's competition handling the same situation?


Rather poorly, if you ask me, as Verizon's Netflix and HBO Max (With Ads) perk is going up from $10 to $13 a month on May 6. That seems to be a direct consequence of Netflix's latest price increase, but even if the offer included Premium streaming with 4K UHD technology (which it doesn't), that still wouldn't explain Big Red's sudden $3 a month hike.

While Verizon says this special bundle will continue to save its customers a cool $6.98 a month compared to the separate costs of the two streaming services (which is obviously better than nothing), it's kind of hard to look at T-Mobile's arch-rival and keep being dissatisfied with the "Un-carrier", don't you agree?
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