Streaming was supposed to be the escape from cable: no bundles, no hidden fees, one clear price. Amazon’s Prime Video Ultra rebrand and the 4K paywall prove that the industry has stopped running from the old playbook and started copying it.
Upselling Ad-Free and 4K Separately Mirrors the Cable Bundle Strategy
On 13 March 2026, Amazon announced that from 10 April its ad-free tier would become Prime Video Ultra at $4.99 per month, up from $2.99, and that 4K streaming would be exclusive to that tier. Base Prime Video subscribers would keep HD with Dolby Vision but lose 4K unless they paid more. According to PCMag Australia, ad-supported Prime Video currently supports up to 4K on TVs; the change strips that and moves it behind the Ultra paywall. CNBC reported that Amazon cited significant investment in streaming and alignment with other major services. The structure is familiar: a base product, then add-ons for ad-free, then add-ons for better picture quality. Cable used to sell a base package, then premium channels, then HD and DVR. Streaming giants are now doing the same. Consumers once fled cable for simpler, flatter pricing; the financial incentives have pushed streamers to bring the old model back.
Variety and Thurrott.com confirmed that the combined cost for a Prime member who wants the full experience is now $184.99 per year: $139 for Prime and $45.99 for Ultra. That is on top of any other streaming subscriptions. The economics of streaming in 2025 and 2026, as reported by Boardroom and others, show that premium streaming bundles can rival or exceed traditional cable costs. Cable packages typically ran $100 to $165 or more per month with equipment and fees; stacking Prime, Netflix premium, Disney+, and others at top tiers pushes households toward similar totals. The difference is that the new bundle is assembled by the user from separate subscriptions and add-ons, each with its own upsell. The result is the same: more revenue per household and more tiers to manage.
Follow the Money: Why Streamers Reverted to the Cable Model
Amazon spent $22.4 billion on content in 2025, up 10 percent, and Prime Video’s revenue has grown from roughly $14.1 billion in 2024 to an estimated $17.5 billion in 2025, according to industry reports. Advertising is a major driver: Amazon’s ad revenue reached $21.32 billion in Q4 2025, up 23 percent, with Prime Video’s ad-supported tier contributing. The company has shifted focus toward live sports to boost profitability, spending about $1 billion annually on NFL Thursday Night Football and billions more on NBA, WNBA, and NWSL rights. The financial incentive is to maximise revenue per user through a mix of ads, ad-free upsells, and premium quality tiers. That is the same logic that drove cable: bundle base, then premium, then equipment and quality add-ons. Streaming giants are not rediscovering the cable playbook by accident; they are following the money. Netflix, Disney+, and HBO Max have already paywalled 4K and ad-free behind higher tiers; Amazon’s March 2026 move simply aligns Prime Video with that pattern and raises the price of the add-on in the process.
What This Actually Means
Ad-free and 4K splits are the streaming equivalent of cable’s premium-channel and HD upsells. The industry promised simplicity and then rebuilt complexity because the economics favour it. Consumers who left cable for streaming are now facing the same pattern: a base tier, then pay more for no ads, then pay more for better picture. The playbook is the same; only the delivery mechanism changed. Until subscribers push back or regulators intervene, the financial incentives will keep pushing streamers to copy the cable model.
What Is the Cable Playbook That Streaming Is Copying?
The cable playbook is the strategy of selling a base package and then layering add-ons: premium channels, HD, DVR, extra set-top boxes, and sports packages. Each add-on increases average revenue per user. Cable companies relied on bundle complexity and long contracts; consumers eventually rebelled and cut the cord. Streaming initially offered flat, simple pricing. Now streamers are reintroducing tiers (ad-supported vs ad-free), quality tiers (HD vs 4K), and premium add-ons. The result is that total spending on streaming can approach or exceed what consumers once paid for cable, with the same logic of incremental upsells driving revenue.
How Much Does Prime Video Cost Now?
In the U.S., Prime Video is included with Amazon Prime ($14.99 per month or $139 per year). The ad-supported tier is the default. To remove ads and get 4K, subscribers must add Prime Video Ultra at $4.99 per month or $45.99 per year (from 10 April 2026). So the full Prime plus ad-free 4K experience costs $184.99 per year, or about $15.42 per month when paid annually. That is before any other streaming services. PCMag Australia and CNBC both reported these figures following Amazon’s 13 March 2026 announcement.