
Apple is raising prices for its music streaming service, Apple Music, for subscribers in the U.S. and other countries.
The individual plan for Apple Music will not cost $11.99 a month, up from $10.99.
“As a result of rising licensing costs, Apple Music is increasing its subscription price beginning today,” Apple said in a statement as the reason for the price increase.
The family plan for Apple Music is now $19.99, up from $16.99, while the student plan is $6.99, up from $5.99.
In tandem, Apple also increased a number of tiers of its Apple One bundles, which include Apple Music.
The individual plan is unchanged, and subscribers will continue to pay $19.95 a month. The price increase starts with the Family tier, now $27.95 (up from $25.95), and the Premier plan, now $39.95 (up from $37.95).
This is the first price increase for Apple Music since October 2022, when the individual plan rose by $1 from $9.99.
Apple Music’s monthly subscription price increase follows Spotify’s price increase earlier this year. Spotify raised the price of its Premium subscription from $11.99 to $12.99, so Apple’s offering is still cheaper at this rate.
Subscription services are raised from time to time, and in August 2025 Apple increased the price of Apple TV to $12.99, up from $9.99. Prior to that, Apple TV’s last subscription increase occurred in October 2023, when the service rose by $3. This price increase didn’t affect Apple One prices, which bundle services such as Apple TV, Apple Music, Apple Arcade, iCloud+, Apple Fitness+, and Apple News+ depending on the tier.
View original source — Deadline ↗



