Sony is bumping up the cost of its PlayStation Plus Essential subscription for new customers, with the change landing this Wednesday. A one-month sub goes from $9.99 to $10.99, and the three-month option jumps from $24.99 to $27.99—a $3 increase. The company cited “ongoing market conditions” for the move, keeping its explanation deliberately vague.Current subscribers are mostly shielded, unless they let their membership lapse or switch tiers. Customers in Turkey and India are the exception—they’ll face the new pricing regardless. The 12-month plan at $79.99 appears untouched for now.
Sony’s second price hike in two months
This isn’t the first time Sony has gone to the well recently. Back in March, it raised the price of the PS5 itself—the standard edition jumped from $549.99 to $649.99, and the PS5 Pro climbed from $749.99 to $899.99. The PlayStation Portal streaming device also crept up by $50. Sony pointed to memory shortages driven by AI demand and broader global economic pressure as the culprits then, too.
Xbox just did the opposite
The timing is awkward for Sony. Microsoft recently cut the price of Xbox Game Pass Ultimate from $29.99 to $22.99 a month, and separately launched a cheaper starter edition through a Discord partnership. That context isn’t lost on PlayStation fans, whose response to Sony’s announcement on X has been notably hostile.It’s worth noting that digital subscription costs shouldn’t be heavily affected by things like tariffs or hardware shortages—which makes the “market conditions” framing feel thin to many. Some analysts suspect the hike is partly meant to offset rising first-party development budgets and softer console sales this generation.