Warner Bros. Discovery is hoping to lure new and returning HBO Max customers with a weeklong Black Friday promotion.
Starting Monday, eligible subscribers can sign up for HBO Max’s ad-supported basic plan with a special Black Friday offer of $2.99 per month for the first 12 months. This is 73% off the regular price of $10.99 per month. Once the promotional period ends, prices will revert to regular price.
This limited-time offer is available until next Monday, December 1, 2025, for new and continuing subscribers of HBOMax.com, Apple, Google Play, Roku, Samsung, Xumo, and “additional select partners” and for new HBO Max customers only on Amazon Fire TV.
HBO Max is the streaming home for exclusive original series, blockbuster movies, and documentaries, as well as a library of TV shows and movies from brands like HBO, Warner Bros., A24, and DC Universe.
In Q3 2025, Warner Bros. Discovery had 128 million streaming subscribers, an increase of 2.3 million from Q2. These include customers of HBO Max, Discovery+ and its sports streaming services.
HBO Max’s upcoming programming lineup includes recently released HBO Originals “I Love LA,” “The Chair Company,” “IT: Welcome to Derry” and “The Seduction.” Documentaries “Alex vs. ARod”, “One to One: John & Yoko”, “Thoughts & Prayers”. The streamer also includes favorite old TV titles like “Friends” and “The Big Bang Theory.” HBO Max also offers movies from Warner Bros. Pictures, DC Studios, Turner Classic Pictures, A24, Studio Ghibli, and more. This includes movies like “Weapons” and “Substance,” as well as fan-favorite series like Harry Potter, The Conjuring, and Final Destination.
In 2026, HBO Max will bring new series “A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms,” “Half Man,” “DTF St. Louis” and “Lanterns,” as well as new seasons of “Industry,” “Hacks,” “The Pitt,” “Euphoria” and “Game of Thrones” spinoff “House of the Dragon.”
WBD also touted HBO Max’s Christmas movie lineup on the service, including the streaming premiere (Dec. 5) of “Elf,” “National Lampoon’s Vacation,” “A Christmas Story,” “The Polar Express,” and “The Family McMullen.”
