Current:Home > MyBinge and bail: How 'serial churners' save money on Netflix, Hulu and Disney -Global Finance Compass
Binge and bail: How 'serial churners' save money on Netflix, Hulu and Disney
View
Date:2025-04-15 00:35:21
Last year, Nicole Weatherford subscribed to a handful of streaming services, which didn’t seem like that much until she added them up.
“At one point last year, we were spending close to $100 a month,” she said. “It was more than what we wanted to budget for TV expenses.”
Weatherford, a blogger, influencer and mother of two from Chattanooga, Tennessee who runs the website EverydayThrifty.com, knew that streaming platforms would offer deals during the holiday shopping season. So she canceled all of the streaming subscriptions and her family watched DVDs that had been gathering dust on the shelf.
Weatherford scored Black Friday promotions for Hulu, Max and Disney+ and now rotates in and out of services like Netflix and Apple TV+ that didn’t offer deals, slashing her streaming budget to $30 a month.
More subscribers are loving, then leaving streaming services
Call it the art of the binge and bail.
Subscribers love Paramount+ for a month or two then leave it for Starz, strategically canceling streaming services and only subscribing again when there are new seasons of favorite shows or new movies to watch.
Their goal: Mainline as much content as possible while minimizing monthly subscription costs.
“Oftentimes, we'll binge a show and just want to watch that for a while. When that happens, we almost never watch shows on other streaming platforms yet we still pay the monthly fee,” Weatherford said.
She said that by rotating streaming services every month or two, her family gets more use out of each.
"And I love that there's no penalty for canceling, or resubscribing either when we're ready to come back,” she said.
Streaming cancellations jump as prices go up
Though streaming platforms don’t release figures on subscriber churn, analysts say more subscribers are canceling services or hopping from one service to another to save money as the streaming industry hikes prices.
That’s what motivated Roshanda Pratt, a 46-year-old entrepreneur and mother of three from Columbia, South Carolina who is reviewing her family’s streaming budget.
Pratt trails off while naming all of her streaming subscriptions: “Peacock, Disney, Amazon Prime, Netflix, Hulu… Those are just the ones I can remember" she said. "My husband would say I forgot one. That’s the problem. We just set it and forget it.”
Not for much longer. Fed up with monthly price hikes and account sharing crackdowns, Pratt is paring streaming subscriptions. So far Hulu made the cut but not long-time family favorite Netflix.
Trimming household expenses is No. 1 reason for cancellations
Cutting household expenses is now the No. 1 reason consumers are canceling streaming subscriptions, said Eric Sorensen, senior analyst and director of streaming products at Parks Associates. It used to be the third most common reason, he says.
“Consumers are definitely looking at ways to save on monthly household bills,” said Sorensen, whose firm does market research and consulting. “Entertainment is one of the first things that people cut. You can’t cut the electric bill.”
In the average household, there’s usually plenty of fat to trim.
Nearly 9 in 10 broadband households – 89% – subscribe to at least one streaming service, over half subscribe to more than four and nearly one-third – 29% – subscribe to more than eight, according to Parks Associates.
“My husband and I are scaling back because it has become so costly,” Pratt said. “Do we really need to have this many choices?”
Confessions of a ‘serial churner’: Stream everything for $15 a month
The silver lining for streaming platforms: Gone today does not mean gone tomorrow.
Jeff Jennings regularly defects from Netflix, Apple, Max, Disney+ and Hulu.
But he always comes back.
Jennings is a “serial churner,” one of millions of subscribers – about one-quarter of them – who have canceled at least three major streaming subscriptions over the past two years, up from 15% in 2021, according to analytics firm Antenna.
Jennings says his streaming bill is about $15 a month. His secret: He only watches one service at a time.
For the 57-year-old from Birmingham, Michigan, that meant watching every episode of “Ted Lasso” and “Severance” on Apple TV+, then moving on to a Max subscription where he’s now catching up on all four seasons of “Succession.”
“There's no reason to keep paying $10 bucks a month waiting for (the new season of) a show that hasn’t come out yet. You might as well cancel until it comes back,” Jennings said. “Then you binge watch it and cancel.”
How to save money with the churn method
Track all of your streaming services: Make a list of all the services you subscribe to.
Plot out what you watch: Track the release dates for your favorite series or the movies you are interested in watching. Resubscribe to services once a season ends or when you have a critical mass of programming to binge.
Set calendar reminders: Weatherford keeps track of streaming services by adding the next billing date to her phone calendar and setting a reminder.
“If I know that I'm going to take time off from that streaming service, I'll go in and just cancel the billing renewal. Almost every platform lets you finish out the billing cycle you paid for. And when that ends, you'll simply be prompted to sign up again,” she said.
Rotate niche services: Can’t give up Netflix, Hulu or Disney? Give up the small fry. Niche services − classic movies on Criterion or British dramas on BritBox − tend to have fewer offerings, so try subscribing to one or two services at a time.
Look for bundle deals and sales: Instacart+ members get a free Peacock subscription, for instance, and various mobile carriers offer streaming deals. For example, T-Mobile customers on the Go5G Next plan now get Hulu's ad-supported plan. Buying a new TV or laptop can come with a free subscription for a limited time. And streaming companies may drop prices during sales events like Black Friday.
Sign up for free streaming services: Freevee, Pluto TV and Tubi all offer free streaming with ads. A library card may also let you watch free movies through streaming services like Hoopla and Kanopy.
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Shannon Sharpe calls out Mike Epps after stand-up comedy show remarks: 'Don't lie'
- 14 Movies, TV Shows and More to Indulge in If You Are Anti-Valentine's Day
- Funerals getting underway in Georgia for 3 Army Reserve soldiers killed in Jordan drone attack
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- More than 1,000 flights already cancelled due to storm, was one of them yours? Here’s what to do
- 'Love is Blind' is back! Season 6 premiere date, time, episode schedule, where to watch
- Bluey launches YouTube reading series with celebrity guests from Bindi Irwin to Eva Mendes
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- When does 'American Idol' Season 22 start? Premiere date, how to watch, judges and more
Ranking
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- Stock market today: Asian shares are mostly higher ahead of US inflation report
- Boy, 15, charged with murder in the fatal shooting of 3 people at an Arkansas home
- A widow opened herself up to new love. Instead, she was catfished for a million dollars.
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Chiefs' exhilarating overtime win in Super Bowl 58 shatters all-time TV ratings record
- Online dating scams peak ahead of Valentine's Day. Here are warning signs you may be falling for a chatbot.
- Horoscopes Today, February 13, 2024
Recommendation
Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
The Best Luxury Bath Towels of 2024 That Are So Soft, They Feel Like Clouds
Hiker kills coyote with his bare hands after attack; tests confirm the animal had rabies
Fake Michigan Certificate of Votes mailed to U.S. Senate after 2020 presidential vote, official says
The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
Fired Northwestern coach wants to move up trial, return to football soon
Voters pick from crowded races for Georgia House and Senate vacancies
Trump indicates he would encourage Russian aggression against NATO allies who don't meet spending targets