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YouTube TV has boosted its price repeatedly since launching in 2017, when a subscription ran $35 a month. By 2019, the monthly cost was $50. YouTube last increased the charge in March 2023 to $72.99.
YouTube TV recently increased its monthly subscription fee to $82.99, up from $72.99 per month. That was the streaming service’s second increase since April 2023, when the price raised from $64.99.
On August 8, 2024, YouTube TV began offering Filipino Plus add-on packages featuring ABS-CBN's TFC along with GMA Network's GMA Pinoy TV, GMA Life TV and GMA News TV. On December 12, 2024 Google announced that it’s price has gone up again, this time from $72.99 to $82.99 a month effective immediately for new customers and beginning on January ...
The cost of a new YouTube TV base plan subscription is increasing from $72.99 to $82.99, starting Dec. 12, 2024, for new users, the company … YouTube TV Raises Price 14%, to $83 per Month ...
In August 2021, YouTube began piloting a second subscription tier, "YouTube Premium Lite" in European markets such as Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Luxembourg, Norway and Sweden, at a price point of €6.99. It contained only the ad-free viewing benefit. [29] YouTube discontinued the Premium Lite plan in October 2023. [30]
A typical rental is either annual or month-to-month, and the amount of rent may be different for long-term renters (because of lower turnover costs). Leaving a long-term lease before its expiration could result in penalties, or even the cost of the entire agreed period (if the landlord is unable to find a suitable replacement tenant after ...
YouTube TV price increases over the years. YouTube TV's subscription prices have increased since the platform began. Here are the price changes: 2017: $35 per month. 2019: $49.99 per month. 2020 ...
In April 2021, the streaming media player company Roku removed Google's YouTube TV app from its channel store after the two companies' agreement expired. According to The Verge , the dispute showed "that even with long-established apps, companies on both sides may agitate to get the upper hand as the dynamic of power evolves toward TV's future."