Methodology

How the site collects and presents pricing data

This site organizes Netflix and Spotify subscription prices by country and converts them into one display currency for easier comparison. Pages show traceable records available in the dataset; if a country or plan is missing, the site does not invent a price.

Data handling workflow

Configured official pricing pages are checked on a schedule, then country, plan, currency, and price records are stored with traceable source context.

Exchange rates refresh separately so prices from different countries can be compared in one display currency.

Comparison pages sort the current dataset by the selected plan, country, and currency to surface the lowest and highest markets.

History pages only show recorded price points; missing periods are not filled with fake trend data.

When a source or plan format is unusual, the interface keeps that context visible instead of blending unlike records together.

Official-page observations and filled coverage are kept separate.

If a market is not a direct official-page observation, the interface can flag it. Standard comparison views prioritize traceable source records.

Display currency is a comparison layer only.

Local prices keep their original billing currency. Converted prices help compare countries on the same scale.

How to interpret the pages

Comparison tables show the latest available price records; countries or plans without data stay empty.
History charts show recorded price points only and do not fill missing periods as fake trends.
Before buying or subscribing, open the source link and confirm the latest price and terms on the official page.