Disney+ Could Cost $235 a Month by 2036 – Here’s the Math Behind That Warning

Predictionist’s decade-long projection compounds Disney+’s 28.6% average annual hike from today’s $18.99 baseline

Annemarije de Boer Avatar
Annemarije de Boer Avatar

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Image: Deposit Photos

Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Disney+ ad-free price surged 172%, rising from $6.99 to $18.99 since 2020.
  • Predictionist projects Disney+ could reach $235/month by 2036 using a 28.6% annual increase rate.
  • Families should review and cancel unused subscriptions annually to avoid compounding streaming costs.

Disney+ Premium has raised its US ad-free price multiple times since launching at $6.99 in 2020. That $235 figure sounds absurd. Analytics firm Predictionist arrived there with straightforward arithmetic, not speculation. Disney+ Premium currently costs $18.99 per month after its October 21, 2025 price hike, up from $15.99, according to Business Insider and Yahoo Tech. Predictionist examined the service’s entire US pricing history from 2020 through 2026, calculated an average annual increase of 28.6%, and projected that rate forward a decade. The result is a conditional warning — not a Disney roadmap — about where compounding percentage hikes can lead if the pattern holds. households often only notice the squeeze once several services have risen at the same time, a sign that many are already paying too much without realizing it.

From $6.99 to $18.99 – The Hike History

Six years of increases have nearly tripled the monthly ad-free price.

The trajectory is blunt. Disney+ launched at $6.99 in 2020 and has risen steadily since, according to A Good Movie to Watch’s price tracker and CableTV’s streaming history:

  • $6.99 in 2020
  • $7.99 in 2021
  • $10.99 in late 2022, when Disney introduced a separate ad-supported tier
  • Held flat in 2023
  • $13.99 in 2024
  • $18.99 this past October

That is a 172% increase in six years.

Predictionist compounded that 28.6% annual rate from the current $18.99 baseline over ten years — $18.99 multiplied by 1.286 to the tenth power lands around $235. A Predictionist spokesperson framed the exercise plainly: “Streaming bills are easy to ignore because they arrive monthly and feel small on their own. The danger is that households often only notice the squeeze once several services have risen at the same time.”

What This Actually Means for Your Subscriptions

Even if Disney+ arrives via a bundle with Hulu, repeated hikes still follow you there.

Even if you access Disney+ through a bundle, your effective cost looks different on paper but not immune in practice. Disney’s own site lists $17.99 as a six-month promotional bundle price, not the standalone rate. Bundles complicate straight-line projections — yet they still get hiked. Think of it like a gym membership you forgot to cancel: harmless until the charge quietly doubles and your bank statement absorbs an extra $50 or more each month across three or four services you barely use.

The practical move costs nothing. “This projection is conditional, not a forecast of Disney’s plans,” the Predictionist spokesperson added. “But it shows why families should review subscriptions at least once a year and cancel anything they are not actively using.” Netflix, Max, and other major streamers have followed similar upward pricing arcs, a pattern well-documented by consumer media trackers. Free ad-supported platforms are growing precisely because of this squeeze.

The $235 price tag may never arrive. The habit of ignoring monthly charges until they collectively sting? That one is already here.

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