Price increase tool

Amazon Prime price increase calculator

See whether a Prime price increase still makes sense for how often you actually use the bundle.

Add the old and new price, then weigh the annual cost against your real order and streaming habits.

Prime is rarely just a shipping question. Count the bundle pieces you truly use.
If you only use one benefit occasionally, test the cost of paying for that benefit separately.
Estimate orders per month so breakeven math is visible instead of fuzzy.

Check your subscription

Enter your numbers, keep everything editable, and see the verdict immediately.

Count the benefits that matter in a normal month.

Run the check

Bundle subscriptions usually fail on weak usage, not on one dramatic moment.

Add your price, usage, and billing details above. The verdict, savings table, scripts, and reminder tools will appear here once you run the check.

What you will get

Recommendation: keep, cancel, downgrade, or rotate.

Annual cost and savings summary.

Billing-path guidance and copyable scripts.

Reminder download before the renewal date.

Put Amazon Prime in your vault

Save the billing platform, renewal timing, and cancellation path now so the next decision is faster than this one.

What matters most

The fastest way to make this call for Amazon Prime

Use it to judge Prime by shipping frequency, streaming value, and the bundle benefits you actually use.

shipping frequency
bundle benefit usage
breakeven order math

How many Prime-linked orders or Prime benefit uses happen in a typical month?

Estimate how many orders would need faster shipping savings each month for Prime to clearly beat paying as needed.

Amazon Prime may be worth keeping if…

You order often enough that shipping convenience matters every month.
You regularly use more than one Prime benefit, not just one occasionally.
Prime Video or other included value would still matter on its own.
The annual cost is low relative to the time or shipping savings you get.

Amazon Prime may not be worth it if…

You mostly keep Prime out of habit.
You use only one benefit and only sometimes.
Your order volume is lower than it used to be.
Free-shipping thresholds or slower shipping would not meaningfully change your life.

Practical alternatives

Cancel and pay for shipping only when you actually need speed.

Separate Prime Video value from shopping value instead of treating the bundle as automatic.

Use Prime only during heavy shopping periods if that fits your pattern.

Keep fewer bundle subscriptions overall and pay directly for the one benefit you use most.

FAQ

How should I react to a Amazon Prime price increase?

Compare the new annual cost against how often you really use it, then check whether cancel and pay for shipping only when you actually need speed. would cover the core value you care about.

How do I know whether Amazon Prime is really worth it?

Count the benefits you actually use in a normal month: shipping, video, and anything else that materially changes your behavior. If only one shows up rarely, the value case gets weak fast.

Should I think about Prime as a shopping plan or an entertainment plan?

Think about both. Prime often feels sticky because it mixes several small benefits, so it helps to split them apart and judge each one honestly.

What if I mainly keep Prime for faster shipping?

Then order frequency is the key input. If you are not shipping often enough for the convenience to matter, the bundle can become expensive inertia.

What happens if I do nothing with Prime?

You keep paying the annual or monthly cost whether or not the bundle still reflects how you shop or watch.

Before you act

Avoid assuming the whole bundle is worth it because one feature still feels useful. Break the value apart first.

Rynlo does not cancel subscriptions for you. It helps you keep the billing path, reminder timing, and next step in one place.