How Much Does Amazon Family Cost?
Published on | Prices Last Reviewed for Freshness: January 2026
Written by Alec Pow - Economic & Pricing Investigator | Content Reviewed by CFA Alexander Popinker
Educational content; not financial advice. Prices are estimates; confirm current rates, fees, taxes, and terms with providers or official sources.
Amazon Family lives inside Amazon’s broader ecosystem. Prime brings fast delivery, Prime Video, and shopping perks, while Amazon Household allows limited sharing of benefits within a single household. Families then pick add-ons, such as Music Unlimited Family for up to six separate listeners, or Kids+ for age-appropriate content. Prices are public, the tiers are simple, and the decision usually comes down to how heavily a home uses shipping and subscriptions.
This guide walks the bill from top to bottom. It goes over membership fees, outlines real-life totals, flags add-on charges, explains discount mechanics, and shows how the family plan compares to rival services. It also notes rules around cancellation that can affect the renewal experience in the United States. Families care because small differences, multiplied by dozens of monthly purchases, move a budget. That matters.
Article Highlights
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- Typical U.S. stack: Prime $14.99/month, Music Family $19.99/month, Kids+ $5.99/month, or about $40.97/month before product subscriptions.
- Annual billing trims costs, for example Music Family at $199/year and Kids+ at $48/year for Prime members.
- Subscribe & Save cuts 5–15 percent on recurring items, with some baby items up to 20 percent under family offers.
- UK Prime is £8.99/month or £95/year. Canada lists C$9.99/month or C$99/year.
- Competing family music plans range from $16.99 to $22.99 per month, with different non-music perks.
- U.S. cancellation protections under the FTC rule were blocked in July 2025, so families should review each service’s online cancellation flow before renewal.
How Much Does Amazon Family Cost?
Most families anchor their setup on Prime, then layer in family features. In the United States, Prime costs $14.99 per month or $139 per year. A free 30-day trial exists for new members, after which the monthly or annual rate applies. Prime is also the gateway to Household sharing and to member pricing on some digital services.
According to Amazon’s official site, only one adult in the household needs to have a Prime membership to enable everyone else to share benefits such as free shipping, Prime Video streaming, Prime Reading, and shared digital content. This means there is no additional cost to set up or use Amazon Household aside from the cost of your Prime membership.
Amazon Music Unlimited Family is the most common add-on because it covers up to six people with separate accounts. Amazon’s official price is $19.99 per month or $199 per year. Promotional offers appear during big retail events, and Amazon’s sign-up pages periodically advertise limited free months for new subscribers, but the standard rate is the figure households should plan around.
Families with younger kids often add Amazon Kids+. Pricing starts at $5.99 per month for Prime members, $7.99 for non-Prime, or $48 per year on an annual plan for members. That delivers child-focused content and parental controls across compatible devices. Add these pieces together and a common monthly stack for a U.S. family is Prime at $14.99, Music Family at $19.99, and Kids+ at $5.99, or about $40.97 per month, before any product subscriptions.
International prices differ. In the UK, Prime runs £8.99 per month or £95 per year, and similar family add-ons are available in local currency. In Canada, Prime sits at C$9.99 per month or C$99 per year. These figures are helpful benchmarks for cross-border households.
NerdWallet also reports that the cost of Amazon Prime membership in 2025 is $139 per year or $14.99 per month. There is no separate fee for Amazon Household or Amazon Family, which is part of the same sharing program. Adults maintain separate accounts, and only select digital content and subscriptions are shared as configured by the account holders.
Real-Life Cost Examples
A two-parent, two-toddler household in Phoenix opts for annual billing to reduce their effective rate. They pay Prime at $139 per year, Music Family at $199 per year, and Kids+ at $48 per year. That is $386 for core memberships.
They also run four Subscribe & Save items monthly, averaging $110 per month on diapers, wipes, toddler snacks, and laundry supplies. With five or more items in a delivery, Subscribe & Save typically yields 15 percent off across the group, with select baby items eligible for up to 20 percent under the family banner. They estimate $220–260 in annual product savings, which lowers their net yearly outlay for memberships plus consumables.
A larger family in suburban Atlanta chooses monthly billing for flexibility. Their stack is Prime $14.99, Music Family $19.99, and Kids+ $5.99, or $40.97 per month. They place more frequent orders, including seasonal school supplies and household cleaners, which shifts savings into shipping and occasional deal events like Prime Day. During July 2025, Prime Day ran four days, and the family captured roughly $150 in cumulative discounts across backpacks, headphones, and pantry bundles. Sales events do not repeat every month, yet they materially reduce the rolling average.
A London couple with one child pays £8.99 per month for Prime and keeps Kids+ on the annual plan, £38–£45 equivalent depending on promotion and VAT. They stream via Apple Music Family at £16.99 rather than Amazon Music due to device preference, illustrating how the total “Amazon family” bill flexes based on which elements a household actually uses. UK rates keep the bundle competitive, although device ecosystems can sway the choice.
Cost Breakdown
The running total has layers. Base membership is the first line. Prime is $14.99 per month or $139 per year in the U.S., £8.99 per month or £95 per year in the UK, and C$9.99 per month or C$99 per year in Canada. Families that prepay annually lower the effective monthly cost. Household sharing rules matter, since Prime benefits share within one household with limits on adult and teen slots.
Recurring subscriptions come next. Subscribe & Save gives 5 percent off one to four items and 15 percent off five or more shipped together to the same address. For diapers and formula, some listings extend to 20 percent for families, though availability and promotions vary. Subscriptions stack fast, and many parents treat this as the core monthly savings engine.
Add-ons include Amazon Music Unlimited Family at $19.99 per month or $199 per year, and Amazon Kids+ at $5.99 per month for Prime members or $48 per year on an annual plan. Optional extras include ad-free upgrades in Prime Video or device warranties that can add $2–$5 per month in small increments.
Hidden costs are modest but real. Expedited shipping for non-Prime items, international surcharges, state or provincial sales tax on digital services, and mid-cycle upgrades can nudge the bill. U.S. families in rural delivery zones may see fewer same-day options, which shifts purchases toward consolidated shipments rather than speed. Knowing these edges helps avoid surprise charges.
Worked total, New York household, annual billing: Prime $139, Music Family $199, Kids+ $48, average Subscribe & Save basket $120 per month list price with a 15 percent discount on five items, yielding $1,224 in list value and $184 saved over a year. Annual memberships plus discounted consumables lands near $1,427 before tax.
Factors Influencing the Cost
Family size drives the baseline. More children means more consumables, more streaming profiles, and a stronger case for a six-seat music plan. Households with infants and toddlers tend to set at least three Subscribe & Save lines that rarely pause. Over a year, scale magnifies both the spend and the savings.
Brand and product choices shape the tab. Eco-friendly wipes, hypoallergenic detergents, and organic snacks carry premiums of 10 to 30 percent over house brands, which can increase the absolute dollar value of a 15 percent Subscribe & Save discount while still leaving a higher net bill. The right mix is different for each home. Short sentences help clarity.
Timing can tilt the math. Families who batch non-urgent orders to hit the five-item threshold get the 15 percent tier more often. Prime Day in July 2025 extended to four days, and Amazon stages another event in October, so deal timing can drop annual costs by $150–300 without changing consumption at all, especially when paired with school-year or holiday shopping.
External rules and program updates matter for renewals. U.S. cancellation standards were set to tighten in July 2025 under the FTC’s “click to cancel” rule for recurring subscriptions, but the rule was blocked by a federal appeals court, which means cancellation experiences still vary by company and state. Families should cancel online where available and screenshot confirmations to avoid renewal surprises.
Alternative Products or Services
Families compare the Amazon Music Unlimited Family price with rival streaming bundles. Spotify Premium Family lists $19.99 per month for six seats at one address. Apple Music Family shows $16.99 per month for up to six listeners. YouTube offers Premium Family at $22.99 per month, which folds in ad-free YouTube and background play for up to five additional members. These numbers shift by country and sometimes move during promotional windows, yet they set the competitive floor in the U.S. as of 2025.
Amazon’s advantage is the wider stack. A family that already pays for Prime shipping and Prime Video might accept paying $19.99 for Music Family because the package consolidates both shopping and entertainment in one account. A family anchored in Apple devices, or one that values YouTube Premium’s video features more than shipping perks, may lean the other way. The right choice hinges on where your non-music benefits sit.
The table below captures current headline prices for the most common family streaming choices. Use the numbers as a snapshot rather than a fixed rule, then layer your expected Subscribe & Save savings and any Prime Day discounts on top to see where the total lands.
| Service | Monthly family price | Members included | Notable perk |
| Amazon Music Unlimited Family | $19.99 | Up to 6 | Integrates with Prime ecosystem |
| Spotify Premium Family | $19.99 | Up to 6 | Broad device support, shared playlists |
| Apple Music Family | $16.99 | Up to 6 | Strong Apple integration |
| YouTube Premium Family | $22.99 | Up to 6 | Ad-free YouTube and background play |
Answers to Common Questions
How many people can share benefits in an Amazon Household?
Amazon allows up to two adults plus up to four teens or children in one household profile, with specific sharing rules for each role.
Does Music Unlimited Family work without Prime?
Yes, Music Unlimited Family is a separate subscription at $19.99/month or $199/year and does not require Prime, though Prime members may see different promotional offers during major sales.
What does Amazon Kids+ cost for Prime members?
Prime members typically pay $5.99/month or $48/year for Kids+. Non-Prime pays $7.99/month on the monthly plan.
Are Subscribe & Save discounts automatic?
Discounts apply when you meet the item thresholds for a delivery. One to four items reduces 5 percent, five or more raises the discount to 15 percent for that shipment, with some family-focused baby items reaching up to 20 percent.
Can I cancel online without calling support?
Amazon provides online tools to manage and cancel subscriptions. A planned federal rule to mandate uniform “click to cancel” across industries was blocked in July 2025, so cancellation steps still vary by company and state law.

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