- Apple Raises iCloud+ costs in Brazil, Chile and Peru
- Some Apple One -Subscriptions are also watching Rise
- iCloud Price Rises has been common all over the world recently
Some iCloud customers face higher prices after Apple raised the cost of plans in multiple nations.
A recently updated support document showed that the Cloud Storage platform will soon cost more for users in Brazil, Chile and Peru, where some levels became up to 34% more expensive.
The move will affect iCloud+ customers in the nations, who are now all facing higher costs across all available levels, according to reports from 9TO5MAC and Makrumors.
iCloud+ price rises
In Brazil, the move will see prices rise to the following; 50 GB – R $ 5.90 (was 4.90), 200 GB – R $ 19.90 (was 14.90), 2TB – R $ 66.90 (was 49,90), 6TB R $ 199.90 (was 149.90) and 12TB – R $ 399,90 (was 299,90).
In Chile it will be as follows; 50 GB – $ 990 (was $ 790), 200 GB – $ 3,290 (was $ 2,490), 2TB – $ 10,990 (was $ 8,490), 6TB – $ 32,990 (was $ 29,990) and 12TB – $ 64,990 (was $ 59,990).
And in Peru, prices will change as follows; 50 GB – S/. 3.90 (was 2.90), 200 GB – S/. 12.90 (was 9.90), 2TB – S/. 42.90 (34.90), 6TB – S/. 129.90 (was 99.90) and 12TB – S/. 259.90 (was 199.90).
9TO5MAC Furthermore, some Apple One plans also see a price increase as the family plan rises to R $ 59.90 and the Premium plan goes up to R $ 99.90 per year. Month – even if the basic plan costs remain the same.
Apple has raised prices for some or all iCloud+ storage plans in at least 10 other countries in recent months, with Japan, South Korea, Thailand, Indonesia, Türkiye, Pakistan, Nigeria, Egypt, Tanzania and Philippines all affected.
Such as the United States, Canada and the UK have avoided iCloud+ price increases so far, but the increasing number of price increases could mean they may be next.
The recent global economic turmoil has led to some countries getting harder than others, with 9TO5MAC Noticing the Brazilian Real has seen a devaluation of 15-20% against the US dollar in the last few years.
Techradar Pro has contacted Apple for comment.