ADVERTISEMENT

Netflix Cuts India Prices in Struggle for Biggest Foreign Market

Netflix slashes prices in India by around 60% to claw back market share from Amazon.com and Walt Disney Co.

Netflix Cuts India Prices in Struggle for Biggest Foreign Market
A laptop computer screen displaying the Netflix homepage. (Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg)

Netflix Inc. slashed prices in India by as much as 60% as it sought to claw back market share from Amazon.com Inc. and Walt Disney Co., the two dominant streaming services in the country that have expanded aggressively with cheap digital packages.

Netflix made reductions across all its four-tier plans with its largest cut on its entry-level plan, which was lowered to 199 rupees ($2.60) a month from 499 rupees, it said in a statement on Tuesday. The new prices will make the streaming service “more accessible” to Indian audiences, said Monika Shergill, vice president for content at Netflix India.

The entertainment giant has struggled to gain traction with highly price-conscious Indian consumers, who represent the biggest overseas prize for streaming platforms. Netflix has won just an estimated 5 million customers in the country, compared to the 46 million who subscribe to the Disney Hotstar platform and 19 million to Amazon Prime Video, according to researcher Media Partners Asia, which estimates India will have one billion video screens by 2024 with 85% broadband usage.

The latest round of price revision is expected to intensify that competition as most of India’s streaming services, including Google, Zee5, Apple TV+, Amazon Prime and Disney have also offered discount deals and subscriptions at prices well below those in other international markets.

“The most meaningful reduction is the basic price plan which opens up the funnel for significant new customer growth,” said Mihir Shah, vice president and head of India at Media Partners Asia. “It will also mean that they will have to go deeper -- local and more regional in their content.”

Like its rivals, Netflix is commissioning and pushing out more locally made content in India. Already helped by increased usage of smart-phones in India, streaming platforms also saw a boost from the pandemic, which forced people indoors for weeks and shut movie theaters.

It’s not the first time Netflix has cut prices in India. In 2019 it lowered subscription prices by as much as half for customers who committed to at least three months. However, it has yet to offer live sports, which both Amazon and Disney stream in India. Netflix’s two rivals are also expected to join a heated bidding fray next year for rights to show the hugely popular Indian Premier League T-20 cricket tournament.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.