‘It’s time to cancel’ Disney+ viewers say as streaming giant announces major change coming in months with an extra FEE

DISNEY+ has announced its password sharing crackdown will hit years this summer.

The House of Mouse is following in the footsteps of Netflix who managed to turnaround their fortunes with a similar tactic last year.

Disney will charge a fee for any extra usersGetty

Bosses have revealed that users “suspected of improper sharing” will be shown a popup message urging them to start their own subscription.

People who want to continue piggybacking on someone else’s account are allowed to add people outside their household for an extra fee.

We are huge Disney fans, but I’m tired of the greed

Disney+ user

Disney hasn’t shared how much the charge will be.

Netflix also does the same currently, charging each extra user £2.50 / $2.99 a month.

“We want to reach as large an audience as possible with our outstanding content,” Disney’s Chief Financial Officer, Hugh Johnston, said.

“We’re looking forward to rolling out this new functionality to improve the overall customer experience and grow our subscriber base.”

How to get Disney+ for FREE

There are ways users can access Disney+ for free legally.

If you own a Samsung device from the last couple of years you can redeem a year’s free access – instructions on how it works can be seen here.

Those who don’t have an eligible gadget can still save money on Disney+ using other tricks.

You can exchange Tesco Clubcard points to pay for Disney+.

And Virgin Media O2 customers can get £2 off Disney+ via the free Priority app by adding the service to their bill.

Fans of the service have raged about the move on social media.

“With the price increase and not allowing password sharing, it’s time to cancel Disney+ and get Paramount+,” one user wrote.

“We are huge Disney fans, but I’m tired of the greed,” another fumed.

“Guess I’m cancelling Disney+ as well then,” a third person concluded.

Tough times

Disney is tightening its belt after latest figures showed the company’s streaming platform lost 1.3million subscribers by the end of 2023.

Separate data from UK ratings organisation Barb suggest the number of people subscribing to paid streaming has declined across the board.

It claims 7.3million homes across the UK had access to Disney+ in the final three months of 2023, compared with 7.6million the three months before.

In a bid to turn things around, Disney has announced a new $1.5billion partnership with Fortnite.

How to cut streaming bills with top FREE TV

Netflix, Disney+ and Amazon Prime don’t come cheap – and year on year subscription costs seem to go up.

Fortunately there are loads of free streaming TV alternatives not everyone knows about.

And we’re not just talking about BBC iPlayer and ITVX.

Here are some free alternatives worth trying:

Hidden streamed channels on your TV from Samsung and LG
Pluto TV with more than 100 extra channels
Amazon’s free alternative Freevee
The free streaming service with more than 30,000 movies and no ads – and all you need is a library card

   

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