Money 6 min read April 14, 2026

Are News Subscriptions Worth It? The Honest Analysis

NYT, FT, The Economist, WSJ, local news — with subscriptions at $15-40/month, here is how to decide what to pay for.

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Leutrim Miftaraj

Founder & CEO, Innopulse Consulting GmbH · April 14, 2026

LinkedIn ↗

News subscriptions have proliferated as advertising revenue collapsed. The average engaged news reader could now pay $100-150/month for the publications they read. That is unsustainable. Here is the framework for rational decisions.

The News Subscription Landscape (2026) New York Times: $17/month (All Access with Games and Cooking) Financial Times: €33/month (Standard) The Economist: €22/month Wall Street Journal: $27/month The Atlantic: $12/month Local newspaper digital: $8-15/month

The Value Framework **Primary publication:** The one you read daily and would miss immediately. Pay for this. **Secondary publication:** The one you read weekly. Consider annual billing for the discount. **Occasional reads:** Use incognito + article limits, sharing programs, or library digital access (Pressreader)

Ways to Pay Less **Library digital access:** Many public libraries provide free digital access to major newspapers via Pressreader or similar platforms.

Group sharing: NYT and Spotify allow account sharing within households. FT allows up to 3 devices.

Student discounts: FT Student: €3.50/month. NYT Student: $1/month for first year.

New subscriber promotions: Cancel, wait 90 days, re-subscribe. Most publications offer new subscriber discounts of 50-70% off.

The Honest Recommendation Pay for at most 2 news subscriptions. Your primary daily source and one specialist publication relevant to your profession. Everything else: use free tiers, library access, or newsletters from journalists you follow directly.

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