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AmazonEntertainmentStreamingTech

Prime Video just killed free 4K — unless you pay up

If you thought your Amazon Prime membership covered 4K streaming, think again — Amazon is quietly stripping that perk starting April 2026.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Mar 15, 2026, 1:21 AM EDT
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A large flat-screen TV displaying the Amazon Prime Video logo against a white screen, set against a dark room with a blue ambient backlight glow, placed on a dark media console with two small decorative objects on either side.
Photo by Thibault Penin / Unsplash
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If you’ve been happily streaming Fallout Season 2 on Amazon Prime Video in crisp 4K without giving it a second thought, enjoy it while it lasts — because that luxury is about to cost you extra. Amazon announced on March 13 that it is overhauling its streaming subscription structure, pulling 4K UHD access away from standard Prime Video and locking it behind a brand new, pricier tier called Prime Video Ultra. The change takes effect on April 10, 2026, and it’s the kind of move that has subscribers doing the math on their monthly bills all over again.

Related /

  • Amazon bumps ad-free Prime Video price starting April 10
  • Prime Video Ultra is here — and it comes with 4K, Dolby Atmos, and no ads

Here’s what’s actually happening. Amazon’s existing “Ad Free” add-on — the $2.99/month bolt-on that lets you watch Prime Video without commercials — is being retired and replaced with Prime Video Ultra, priced at $4.99 per month. That’s a 67% price jump on an add-on that already sat on top of a $14.99/month Prime membership. If you want the full Ultra experience going forward, you’re looking at nearly $20 a month in total, not even counting whatever else you’re subscribed to. And the kicker? Amazon isn’t raising the base price of Prime — it’s just quietly dismantling one of the biggest perks that came bundled with it.

For years, 4K streaming was simply part of the deal for Prime Video members. Whether you paid for ads or sat through them, UHD content was right there at your fingertips. That changes in April. Once Prime Video Ultra launches, standard Prime members — you know, the ones already shelling out $139 a year — will be capped at 1080p. Dolby Atmos audio, too, stays exclusive to the Ultra tier. Amazon has tried to soften the blow a little: the base ad-supported plan will now allow four concurrent streams instead of three, and the download limit is going up to 50. But losing 4K for content you’ve been watching in 4K for years? That’s a meaningful step backward, no matter how many extra downloads you throw at it.

Amazon’s pitch for Prime Video Ultra is that you’re getting enhanced value, not just a price hike. The Ultra tier bumps concurrent streams from three to five, raises download capacity from 25 to a much more generous 100, and now includes Dolby Vision support for the first time. In a blog post, the company framed it plainly: “Delivering ad-free streaming with premium features requires significant investment, and this structure aligns with other major streaming services while ensuring customers have the flexibility to choose how they want to watch“. That’s corporate-speak for: the free lunch is over, and we’ve been watching how Netflix does it.

And Netflix did do it first, of course. The streaming industry’s price creep has been building steadily for years, hitting a point where it’s almost a rite of passage for a service to raise rates. Netflix bumped its ad-free Standard plan by $2.50 to $18/month in early 2025 and pushed its Premium tier to $25/month. Disney+ has raised prices multiple times — yes, again and again. HBO Max just hiked its standard subscription by $1.50 to $18.49/month.

What makes Amazon’s move sting a little differently is the sheer scale of what Prime Video represents. Amazon Prime has an average ad-supported audience of more than 315 million viewers globally. This isn’t a niche streaming service adjusting for a small subscriber base — this is one of the biggest entertainment platforms on the planet, stripping a feature that has been standard for years and asking hundreds of millions of people to pay extra to get it back. There’s a certain audacity to that, even in an industry that has normalized the slow erosion of subscriber value.​

For families or households that actually use Prime Video heavily — multiple devices streaming simultaneously, offline downloads for flights or commutes — the Ultra tier might genuinely pencil out. Five concurrent streams and 100 downloads aren’t small upgrades, and Dolby Vision is a real quality improvement for anyone with a compatible TV. But for the casual viewer who just wants to watch a movie in decent quality on a weekend without thinking twice about it? Paying $20 a month — when Netflix, Disney+, and Apple TV are all also demanding their cuts — is a very different proposition than what Prime Video used to represent.​

It’s worth remembering how Amazon got here in the first place. The company introduced ads to Prime Video back in early 2024 without any advance warning, and then quietly offered subscribers the chance to pay $2.99/month to opt out. The move was widely criticized at the time as a bait-and-switch — Prime members had signed up expecting an ad-free experience and suddenly found themselves paying extra just to get back to what they originally had. Now, that same add-on is being rebranded, repriced, and expanded in scope, with 4K being folded into it as an “exclusive” feature. The messaging is new. The underlying dynamic is the same.

Industry analysts have been raising alarm bells about the cumulative weight of streaming price increases for a while now. Andrew Hare, Senior Vice President at media research consultancy Magid, has put it bluntly: “The industry is playing a dangerous game by continuing to raise prices. We’re nearing a boiling point of rising churn and overwhelming choice“. And the data is backing that up. As of mid-2025, 24% of consumers said they intended to cancel at least one streaming service in the next six months — up from 19% just a year earlier. People are paying attention, and the goodwill that streaming services built up in the cord-cutting era is wearing thin.​

Amazon’s counterargument would likely be that Prime Video is still, even at $20/month, bundled with a mountain of other Prime benefits — free shipping, Prime Music, Prime Reading, grocery discounts, and more. And that’s true. But there’s something different about methodically downgrading a service people are already using versus simply adding new paid tiers. The calculus for Prime members right now is essentially: you used to get 4K as part of your membership. You don’t anymore. Pay more if you want it back. Whether that feels reasonable or like a shakedown probably depends on how much you rely on Amazon’s shipping — and how patient you are with the streaming industry’s increasingly familiar playbook.​

If you want to get your UHD fix before the deadline, you’ve got until April 9 to do it without paying extra. Fallout Season 2 is right there, in all its post-apocalyptic 4K glory, waiting to be binged. After that, Amazon would very much like you to upgrade.


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