Plex has announced a massive price increase on the service’s Lifetime Plex Pass. On July 1, the lifetime subscription option will go from $249.99 to $749.99, an increase of 200%. The price hike will only apply to new subscribers, with no changes to monthly or annual subscription pricing.
As of 2026, the Plex Pass costs $2.99/month or $69.99/year. The Lifetime Pass offers what you would think: life-long access to a personal Plex server, paid upfront without any recurring charges. The company’s blog post notes that the service “considered eliminating the Lifetime Plex Pass” given the additional revenue generated by monthly subscriptions. However, the service also “recognized the value” of offering a lifetime subscription, a notable distinction Plex has over any streaming competitors.
In short, the massive increase seems to be the company’s way of justifying an otherwise unconventional subscription option.
The company’s blog post also described a number of improvements they plan to make to the streaming service in pursuit of justifying the massive increase. These include:
- Improvements to Downloads, such as grouping by show and the ability to automatically download new episodes
- Support for Playlist creation and editing in the mobile apps
- Music and photo library support will be restored in the mobile apps and the new experience on TV apps.
- Support for NFO metadata
- All server and library management features currently available on app.plex.tv will be added to the mobile apps (and TV apps where it makes sense)
- Audio enhancements such as boosting dialog and normalizing loudness
- Additional transcoding video improvements
- IPv6 Support
Plex originally launched the Plex Pass as a ‘premium’ plan back in 2012. Instead of having digital copies of movies and TV shows stored across platforms like Apple TV or Prime Video, a Plex server allows users to keep all of their digital media in a single place. Plex Pass subscribers have free reign over this media server, with access to remote sharing, downloads for offline viewing, and the ability to curate your own collections. It’s a particularly useful system for folks with robust Blu-ray collections who end up with piles of digital codes.
While this is the most substantial price increase we’ve seen on any individual streaming service, the announcement does follow recent price hikes from traditional services like Crunchyroll, Paramount+, and Disney+, as well as gaming subscriptions like PlayStation Plus. The one exception? Xbox Game Pass, which actually just got a price cut.
Blythe (she/her) is an Audience Development Coordinator at IGN who, when she isn’t following streaming news, spends way too much time in character customization screens and tracking down collectibles.


