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The Streaming Service Cost Comparison calculator helps users compare monthly and annual costs across major video streaming platforms including Netflix, Disney+, HBO Max (now Max), Hulu, Apple TV+, Amazon Prime Video, Peacock, and Paramount+. With the average American household subscribing to 4-5 streaming services simultaneously, annual spending can easily reach $600-$1,200 per year — rivaling or exceeding traditional cable TV. This calculator breaks down costs by tier (ad-supported vs. ad-free vs. premium), factors in annual vs. monthly billing discounts, accounts for bundle deals (Disney Bundle, Hulu + Live TV), and calculates total annual streaming spend. It helps users identify which combination of services delivers the best value for their viewing habits and budget.
Total Annual Cost = Sum of (Monthly Price x 12) for each service, or Annual Plan Price where available. Savings from Annual Billing = (Monthly Price x 12) - Annual Plan Price. Cost per Hour of Content = Monthly Cost / Hours Watched per Month.
- 1Select the streaming services you currently subscribe to or are considering (Netflix, Disney+, Max, Hulu, Apple TV+, etc.).
- 2Choose the subscription tier for each service: ad-supported (cheapest), standard ad-free, or premium (4K/multi-screen).
- 3Enter whether you pay monthly or annually — annual plans typically save 15-20% but require upfront commitment.
- 4The calculator sums all monthly costs and multiplies by 12 to compute your total annual streaming spend.
- 5It identifies potential savings: bundle deals (Disney+/Hulu/ESPN+), annual billing discounts, and dropping underused services.
- 6Cost-per-hour analysis divides your monthly spend by estimated viewing hours to show entertainment value relative to other activities.
- 7The comparison view ranks services by cost-effectiveness and highlights which services offer the most content per dollar.
Four services at their standard ad-free tiers total $61.96/month or $743.52/year. This is comparable to a basic cable package but with no contracts, on-demand content, and the ability to cancel anytime. Switching Disney+ and Max to ad-supported tiers would save $14/month ($168/year).
By choosing ad-supported tiers and a free service (Tubi), the total drops to $25.97/month — $311.64/year. This is 58% less than the all-premium stack. The tradeoff is 4-6 minutes of ads per hour on Netflix and Disney+, and limited content on Peacock's lower tier.
A premium sports-focused stack with live TV approaches $146/month — actually more expensive than many traditional cable packages. YouTube TV replaces cable with 100+ live channels. The Disney Bundle saves ~$8/month versus subscribing to Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+ separately.
Switching just these two services to annual billing saves $53.78/year — a 16-17% discount on each. If you're confident you'll keep a service for 12+ months, annual billing is almost always the better deal. However, you lose the flexibility to cancel month-to-month.
Household budget optimization: Families review their total streaming spend and identify services to downgrade, rotate, or cancel to stay within entertainment budget targets.
Cord-cutting planning: Cable subscribers model the cost of replacing their cable package with a combination of streaming services and live TV streaming to determine actual savings.
Financial coaching: Personal finance advisors use streaming cost analysis as a concrete example of subscription creep and help clients reclaim $30-$80/month in wasted spending.
Family plan optimization: Households determine whether family/premium tiers (more screens) are cheaper than multiple individual accounts for family members.
Content value analysis: Entertainment enthusiasts calculate cost-per-hour of streaming versus other entertainment options (movies, concerts, gaming) to make informed leisure spending decisions.
Password Sharing Crackdowns and Extra Member Fees
Netflix led the industry in 2023 by cracking down on password sharing and introducing paid sharing at $7.99/month per extra household. Disney+ and Max have followed with similar policies. When calculating true streaming costs, factor in extra member fees if you share accounts across households — this can add $8-$10/month per additional household.
Live TV Streaming as Cable Replacement
YouTube TV ($82.99/mo), Hulu + Live TV ($82.99/mo), and Sling TV ($40-$55/mo) serve as full cable replacements with 75-100+ live channels including local networks and sports. These are significantly more expensive than on-demand streaming alone but include DVR functionality and eliminate the need for cable equipment rental fees.
International Pricing Differences
Streaming prices vary dramatically by country. Netflix ranges from ~$3/month in India to $25/month in the US for equivalent tiers. Services not available in certain countries may require VPN access (which adds $3-$13/month). Some services offer regional content libraries that differ from the US catalog.
| Service | Ad-Supported | Standard (No Ads) | Premium/Ultimate | Annual Option |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Netflix | $7.99/mo | $17.99/mo | $24.99/mo (4K, 4 screens) | No |
| Disney+ | $9.99/mo | $16.99/mo | - | $169.99/yr (no ads) |
| Max (HBO) | $9.99/mo | $16.99/mo | $20.99/mo (4K, 4 screens) | $169.99/yr (no ads) |
| Hulu | $9.99/mo | $18.99/mo | +Live TV: $82.99/mo | No |
| Apple TV+ | - | $9.99/mo | - | $99.99/yr |
| Amazon Prime Video | - | $8.99/mo (standalone) | $14.99/mo (w/ Prime) | $139/yr (w/ Prime) |
| Peacock | Free (limited) | $7.99/mo | $13.99/mo (no ads) | $79.99/yr (Premium) |
| Paramount+ | $7.99/mo | $13.99/mo | - | $59.99/yr (Essential) |
How much does the average household spend on streaming?
As of 2025, the average U.S. household subscribes to 4.1 streaming services and spends approximately $61 per month ($732/year) on streaming subscriptions. This has nearly doubled since 2020, driven by price increases across all major platforms and the proliferation of exclusive content requiring multiple subscriptions.
Is streaming actually cheaper than cable?
Basic streaming (2-3 ad-supported services) at $20-$35/month is significantly cheaper than cable ($75-$150/month). However, a premium streaming stack with live TV (5+ services, ad-free, plus YouTube TV or Hulu Live) can reach $120-$180/month — matching or exceeding cable costs. The key difference is flexibility: streaming has no contracts.
What are the best streaming bundles to save money?
Top bundle deals in 2025: Disney Bundle Trio ($16.99/month for Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+ — saves ~$8/month vs. separate). Apple One ($19.95/month for Apple TV+, Music, Arcade, iCloud+). Verizon and T-Mobile offer free streaming perks (Netflix, Disney+, Apple TV+) with select wireless plans. Amazon Prime ($14.99/month) includes Prime Video plus shipping and other benefits.
Should I choose ad-supported or ad-free tiers?
Ad-supported tiers typically save $4-$10/month per service. Netflix's ad tier shows about 4-5 minutes of ads per hour (vs. 15-20 minutes on traditional TV). If you watch 2 hours/day on a service, you'll see roughly 8-10 minutes of ads daily. For many viewers, this is an acceptable tradeoff for saving $48-$120/year per service.
How can I reduce streaming costs without losing content?
Rotate subscriptions monthly — subscribe to one or two services at a time, binge their best content, then switch. Use free trials strategically. Downgrade to ad-supported tiers on services you watch casually. Share family plans where allowed. Check if your phone carrier, credit card, or employer offers free streaming perks.
What happened to HBO Max?
HBO Max rebranded to simply 'Max' in May 2023 when Warner Bros. Discovery merged HBO Max with Discovery+ content into a single platform. The pricing tiers remained similar, starting at $9.99/month (with ads) and $16.99/month (ad-free), with a new Ultimate tier at $20.99/month offering 4K and 4 simultaneous streams.
Pro Tip
The most cost-effective streaming strategy is rotation: subscribe to 1-2 services at a time, watch their best content over 1-2 months, then cancel and switch to different services. Most streaming content is evergreen (not time-sensitive), so there is no penalty for watching a show 3 months after release. This approach can cut annual streaming costs by 50% or more while still accessing all major platforms throughout the year.
Did you know?
If you subscribed to every major streaming service at their ad-free tier simultaneously in 2025 (Netflix, Disney+, Max, Hulu, Apple TV+, Amazon Prime Video, Peacock, Paramount+, and YouTube Premium), you would pay approximately $155/month or $1,860/year — and still have access to less than 60% of all available streaming content, since some content is exclusive to smaller niche platforms.