
Audio By Carbonatix
Netflix is launching a new streaming option with adverts in November, introducing a less expensive offering as it fights to keep viewers.
The plan will be available in 12 countries including the UK, US, Canada, Mexico and Australia.
The firm said it would charge £4.99 a month for the service in the UK, while it will cost $6.99 in the US.
Netflix has been losing customers as competition and cost of living pressures mount.
The company lost more than 1 million subscribers in the first half of this year. It is due to provide an update of that figure to investors next week.
'Price for every fan'
Netflix's move into advertising is a big change for the company, which pioneered the idea of subscription-based streaming.
But as more entertainment companies roll out online streaming platforms, it has had a harder time retaining subscribers, especially as households concerned about the rising cost-of-living look for ways to cut back.
In the UK, the least expensive plan without commercials starts at £6.99 a month.
"We're confident that ... we now have a price and plan for every fan," the company said in a press release.
"While it's still very early days, we're pleased with the interest from both consumers and the advertising community and couldn't be more excited about what's ahead."
Subscribers to the new offering should expect to see an average of four to five minutes of adverts per hour, the company said.
Some films and TV series also will not be available due to licensing restrictions.
The company said it planned to expand the offering to more countries over time.
Many of Netflix's competitors already combine streaming with adverts or have plans to.
Disney, for example, is due to roll out an advert supported service in December in the US. That plan will start at $7.99 a month.
Jeremi Gorman, Netflix's president of worldwide advertising, said it had nearly sold out all the available ad time for the launch, a sign of the interest from advertisers in reaching younger audiences that are increasingly turning away from traditional television.
Netflix is asking people who sign up for the ad service for gender and birth date information as part of efforts to target ads.
Latest Stories
-
Free golf training empowers underprivileged girls in Accra
1 minute -
Why SIGA’s reset is not a market sin, but a national necessity
4 minutes -
SIGA Directive: Beyond the theatre of institutional displacement
7 minutes -
Boso Odweegyi Festival 2026 launched with call for unity, cultural preservation
7 minutes -
YEA clears majority of beneficiary arrears, assures completion of outstanding payments
45 minutes -
AfCFTA key to building globally competitive African businesses – Zambia envoy urges Ghanaian CEOs
58 minutes -
Albert Kobina Mensah, soil pollution and remediation: Risk assessment, phytoremediation, revegetation
1 hour -
GIFEC supports national rollout of One Million Coders Programme with laptop presentation
1 hour -
Old Tafo MP rolls out street lights project to boost security and night-time economy
1 hour -
Telecel Ghana CEO urges urgent education reform and stronger industry-academia partnership at UEW Public Lecture
1 hour -
Nigerian army general and several soldiers killed in assault on military base in northeast
1 hour -
Dagbamete chief urges completion of road project, expansion of vocational training
2 hours -
Urgently cancel Truedare AI Customs deal over cost concerns – Joseph Cudjoe to Mahama
2 hours -
Poor safety habits to blame for recurring boat fatalities — GMA boss, Kamal-Deen Ali
2 hours -
Owabi 75% blocked, Barekese loses 40% capacity as siltation, plastics threaten water supply crisis
2 hours