Sony has raised prices for its PlayStation Plus subscription service, with the changes affecting one-month and three-month plans.
A one-month subscription to the Essential tier now costs $11, up by $1. The three-month plan has increased to $28, up by $3. Annual subscribers appear to be unaffected for now. However, Sony’s post on X announcing the change suggests that the Extra and Premium tiers may also be affected.
The increase applies only to new subscribers, except in Turkey and India.
Sony blamed the price increase on “ongoing market conditions.” The report noted that tech companies often use this phrase in 2026 when referring to tariff pressure or the AI-driven memory crunch.
However, PS Plus is a digital subscription service that gives members access to monthly downloadable games. Subscribers also get cloud save storage and online multiplayer access, both of which require server infrastructure that may now cost more to operate.
Sony has not said whether annual PS Plus plans will become more expensive in the near future.
The company only mentioned one-month and three-month plans in its announcement.
Sony previously raised annual PS Plus prices by as much as $40 in 2023.
The latest PS Plus price increase comes after Microsoft recently raised the price of Xbox Game Pass Ultimate to $30 per month.
That move drew criticism from players. New Microsoft Gaming CEO Asha Sharma later reversed the change.
The PS Plus increase is smaller than recent hardware price changes, but it still adds to the cost of using PlayStation services.
A standard PS5 with a disc drive now costs $650, making the upfront cost of entering the PlayStation ecosystem much higher before users even subscribe to PS Plus.