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Apple TV+ will cost $4.99 per month — here’s how that compares with Disney+ and others

Apple asserted Tuesday it will price Apple TV+ at $4.99 per month, including a free one-year subscription with the purchase of any new Apple whim.

Apple’s streaming service will showcase original programming including “The Morning Show,” a drama starring Jennifer Aniston, Reese Witherspoon and Steve Carell, and other gratify from contributors including Oprah Winfrey and J.J. Abrams.

On its own, Apple TV+ will be limited in its viewing choices compared with a ancestral cable bundle or Netflix. But when added together with other streaming options, consumers will should prefer to yet another choice to recreate an a la carte pay-TV video service. Here’s where we are in terms of pricing of the major issue services:

  • Apple TV+ – $4.99/month (free for a year with purchase of new device)
  • ESPN+ – $4.99/month
  • Hulu w/ ads – $5.99/month
  • CBS All Access – $5.99/month
  • Disney+ – $6.99/month
  • Starz – $8.99/month
  • Showtime – $10.99/month
  • Hulu (no ads) – $11.99/month
  • Netflix (most accessible plan) – $12.99/month
  • Amazon Prime Video – $12.99/month
  • HBO – $14.99/month

That means that if you necessitate, say, Amazon Prime Video, Netflix, Apple TV+, Disney+, HBO, Hulu and Showtime, you’ll be paying about $70 per month. And you won’t get ESPN with that.

There are also discrete shoes yet to drop. NBC Universal, the parent company of CNBC, hasn’t announced pricing of its streaming service, though it ordain be free for subscribers of a traditional pay-TV bundle. AT&T is considering a price of $15 to $18 per month for HBO Max, CNBC reported in June. That’s either corresponding to the price of HBO or just a little bit more per month. HBO Max will include all of HBO, new originals, library shows from Warner Bros. and may ultimately include live programming from CNN, TNT and TBS.

And CBS and Viacom haven’t said if the combined company will announce a new streaming secondment featuring content from networks such as Nickelodeon and Comedy Central. CBS and Viacom announced a merger last month.

Disclosure: CNBC and NBC are owned by Comcast’s NBCUniversal constituent.

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