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May 21, 2026

Plex Pass’ $750 lifetime price is for suckers | usagoldmines.com

Plex is pulling up the ladder on anyone who wants to run a home media server without a subscription.

On July 1, the cost of a lifetime Plex Pass will jump from $250 to $750. While Plex’s core media server features are free, the subscription is required for over-the-air DVR, hardware-accelerated streaming, mobile downloads, and other advanced features. It also covers out-of-home access to your server content, which otherwise requires a separate standalone subscription with no lifetime option.

Plex is doing right by its existing customers and honoring previously purchased Plex Passes at no extra cost, and it’s giving prospective customers a couple months to jump on board at the current $250 price. On a recurring basis, Plex Pass still costs $7 per month or $70 per year—prices that took effect after a previous hike in April 2025.

There’s nothing inherently wrong with wanting more predictable revenue streams, but charging $750 for the alternative feels a bit insulting without stronger assurances of where Plex Media Server is going. If Plex is still going to bother with lifetime Plex Passes, it ought to prove that the investment will be worth it.

What’s a lifetime subscription worth?

At $250, lifetime Plex Passes aren’t too much of a gamble. Compared to paying $70 per year, the lifetime option would pay for itself by year four. But at $750, you’d have to use the Plex Pass for more than a decade to break even.

A lot can change in that timeframe. Ten years ago, Plex was still primarily in the media server business. Its biggest launches of that era were ambitious things like over-the-air DVR support and cloud-based media servers. (The latter feature was sadly discontinued in 2018.) A whole bunch of major streaming services didn’t even exist yet.

Since then, Plex has shifted its business toward streaming. It launched an ad-supported movie and TV show catalog in 2019, added live streaming channels the following year, and started selling movie rentals in 2024. The company has also taken on a lot of outside funding—$50 million in 2021, another $40 million in 2024—to fuel its streaming ambitions. When you visit Plex’s home page now, the ability to stream your own content from a server you control is a mere footnote.

Plex doesn’t even have the same CTO anymore. Elan Feingold, who co-founded Plex in 2008, quietly left the company at the end of last year. He’d been maintaining the excellent Plexamp music player, which itself has a lot of features tied to Plex Pass, and it sounds like he’ll continue to do so, but the long-term implications are unclear.

All of which makes it tough to predict what Plex will look like in another 10 years. Will future leadership have the same passion for media servers as its founders? Will investors get antsy about the costs of supporting the server product? Is there a scenario in which the media server business gets spun out or shut down, or in which lifetime subscriptions become watered down to worthlessness? (Such things have happened with other companies before.)

While Plex says it’s upping the lifetime price so it can keep investing resources into media server software, it’s also not making any guarantees as to its future. Anyone who’s considering a $750 lifetime Plex Pass will need to keep this in mind.

Doing less with more

Conversely, you could view the $750 cost of a lifetime Plex Pass as a commitment from the company, an implicit sign that it’s willing to support customers for at least the next decade.

But even then, it’d be nice if Plex’s plans for the media server were more ambitious to reflect the new cost structure. Instead, Plex is dangling a handful of small niceties—things like mobile playlist editing, categorization of downloads, and dialog boost modes—as a sign that it’s taking the server side seriously.

Why not aim a little higher? Plex offers only bare-bones photo browsing, when there’s a wide-open opportunity to create a self-hosted Google Photos alternative with features like face tagging and mobile camera syncing. Plexamp is a best-in-class music player, but there’s still no good way to play songs by voice on smart speakers (especially with the forthcoming demise of Plex’s Alexa skill).

On the video front, it’d be great if Plex borrowed some features from rival Channels DVR, like creating virtual channels from your media library and recording from online video sources. Better yet, how about finding a way to support ATSC 3.0, the new over-the-air TV standard that broadcasters hope will replace ATSC 1.0 in the next few years? Without that, Plex’s DVR features could become worthless long before the lifetime Plex Pass pays for itself.

In lieu of bigger commitments to the server side, the $750 lifetime price looks a bit more cynical—a way to discourage long-term commitments in favor of monthly or annual subscriptions. In a blog post, Plex acknowledges that it considered just ditching the lifetime subscription outright. Instead, it’s settled on a price it knows you won’t pay for a product whose future doesn’t seem guaranteed.

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This articles is written by : Nermeen Nabil Khear Abdelmalak

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