Quick math problem. You pay Amazon $139 a year for a Prime membership. Recently, a JPMorgan analyst touting Amazon stock pegged the real value of that membership at $1,440 — more than 10 times what you’re shelling out.
So is Prime the best deal in America, or is something else going on? A little of both. Here’s the truth behind that eye-popping number, and what it means for your wallet.
1. The $1,440 comes from taking Prime apart, piece by piece
JPMorgan analyst Doug Anmuth and his team priced out every Prime perk on its own — fast shipping, Prime Video, music, photo storage, the free Grubhub+ membership, grocery delivery, gas discounts.
Buy all of that separately and you’d spend about $1,440 a year. That’s the math behind the headline. For the record, JPMorgan says that figure was around $544 back in 2016, so the perks really have piled up.
2. But it’s only worth $1,440 if you’d actually buy all of it
Here’s the catch. That number assumes you’d pay full price for every single service on your own.
Most of us don’t. If you sign up for free shipping and watch a movie now and then, your real value is a small slice of $1,440 — not the whole pie. It pays to know which of the Prime benefits you’ll actually use. The ones you never touch are worth exactly zero to you.
3. Consider who’s running the numbers
JPMorgan isn’t a consumer watchdog. It rates Amazon stock a buy, with a price target well above where the shares trade today.
A report showing Prime is wildly underpriced is also a report arguing Amazon has plenty of room to charge more — which is exactly what stock investors want to hear. That doesn’t make the math wrong. It just means you should read it with one eyebrow raised.
Quick gut-check — if your money advice is coming from random online influencers, you’re playing a dangerous game. I’ve been a CPA since 1981 and writing about money since before the internet existed. Sign up for the free Money Talks Newsletter and get expert advice that’s been tested by time.
4. The price hike you’ve been dreading just got pushed to 2027
For months, analysts expected Amazon to raise Prime’s price in 2026. The company tends to bump the fee about every four years, and the last increase was in 2022.
Now JPMorgan thinks 2027 is the more likely date. Translation: You’ve probably got another year at $139 before Amazon comes asking for more.
5. Amazon’s in no rush — and that tells you plenty
Why would a company sit on a price increase? Because it can.
JPMorgan figures even a $20 bump would add around $3 billion in sales, with few members canceling over it. Amazon’s already nudging costs up in smaller ways, like carving features out of Prime Video and charging extra for them. It’ll raise the base price when it’s good and ready, and most people will grumble and pay.
6. The only number that matters is yours
Forget JPMorgan’s $1,440. The question isn’t what Prime is worth in theory — it’s what it’s worth to you.
Pull up your Amazon order history and tally the perks you actually use. If Prime saves you more than $139 a year, it’s a keeper.
If not, you’ve got options. You can get Prime for less, weigh it against Walmart+, or find solid reasons to cancel and keep the $139.
A Wall Street analyst will gladly tell you your $139 membership is secretly worth $1,440. Maybe it is — for somebody who squeezes every last perk.
But you don’t need a bank with a stake in Amazon’s stock to tell you whether Prime earns its keep in your house. That math you can do yourself.
Read the full article here















