Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

Nintendo Switch Online’s Expansion Pack is a pricey online plan

Add as a preferred source on Google

While today’s Animal Crossing Direct was largely about the game’s upcoming 2.0 update and newly revealed DLC, Nintendo also snuck in pricing details for its new version of Nintendo Switch Online. Titled Nintendo Switch Online + Expansion Pack, the service will cost individual users $50 per year, while a family plan version that lets up to eight accounts use the service will cost $80.

Nintendo Switch Online + Expansion Pack Pricing.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Nintendo Switch Online + Expansion Pack was revealed during Nintendo’s last Direct showcase. The upgraded version of Nintendo Switch Online will give its users access to a library of Nintendo 64 and Sega Genesis titles, as well as to the new Animal Crossing: New Horizons paid DLC, Happy Home Paradise. While pricing for the service has been revealed, Nintendo has not revealed when users will actually be able to subscribe to Nintendo Switch Online + Expansion Pack.

Recommended Videos

It’s worth noting that Nintendo Switch Online + Expansion Pack’s pricing is a fair leap from what users pay for the base version of the service. A yearlong individual membership for Nintendo Switch Online costs only $20, while a family plan runs customers just $35. In both cases, Nintendo Switch Online + Expansion Pack is more than twice the cost of its basic counterpart.

For users, that pricing might be a bit high. Nintendo Switch Online itself has drawn criticism over the years for its lackluster library of games and Nintendo’s own subpar multiplayer service, which doesn’t offer any voice chat capability. Users may be hesitant to shell more money out to the company without being assured that the service’s base issues will also be addressed in the Nintendo Switch Online + Expansion Pack.

Otto Kratky
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Otto Kratky is a freelance writer with many homes. You can find his work at Digital Trends, GameSpot, and Gamepur. If he's…
A Nintendo Super Mario Bros. copy just sold for a staggering $3 million
This rare Super Mario Bros. copy is now the most expensive video game ever sold
Super Mario Bros Sealed Copy

A sealed copy of Super Mario Bros. for the NES just sold for $3 million, which is a historic moment for video game collecting. The sale happened on June 12 during Heritage Auctions’ Video Games Signature Auction. According to Heritage, the copy is the highest-graded example of the earliest sealed edition of Super Mario Bros. and beat the previous video game record by $1 million. That earlier record was a $2 million private sale in 2021, also for a copy of Super Mario Bros.

Why this isn't just any other Mario cartridge

Read more
I tried ASUS’ ROG Xbox Ally X20, and the 171-inch screen changes everything
Asus made a handheld gaming bundle that thinks it’s a home theater
ASUS ROG Xbox Ally X20 Bundle with XREAL R1 20th Anniversary Edition

Gaming handhelds are great because they are portable (basically small). But that is also one of its biggest weaknesses. I was reminded of that while trying Asus’ new ROG Xbox Ally X20 bundle at Computex 2026. On its own, the Ally X20 is already a more polished version of the ROG Xbox Ally X. It arrives with nice updates that sound minor on paper but make a device feel more complete in your hands. The real surprise, though, was the bundled ROG XREAL R1 Edition 20 Gaming AR Glasses.

I walked in to try the 20th anniversary edition of ASUS' handheld console, but the massive 171-inch screen trick surprisingly stole the show.

Read more
From Handhelds to Monitors, these were the biggest glow-ups at Computex 2026
I walked into Taipei expecting spec bumps and walked away convinced four entire categories had levelled up.
Biggest Glowups at Computex 2026

Every year, Computex promises the next big thing. Sometimes that means another processor with a few extra cores, a laptop that's 200 grams lighter, or a monitor that's somehow even faster than the one before it. But every now and then, a trade show surprises you not with a single product, but with an entire category that suddenly feels new again. That's exactly how Computex 2026 felt to me.

After spending days walking the show floor, trying products, talking to engineers, and inevitably getting lost between booths more times than I'd like to admit, one thing became crystal clear. The biggest stories weren't about incremental upgrades. They were about categories, finally shedding old compromises. Monitors became smarter, handhelds became more mature, creator laptops became more versatile, and ARM processors started looking like genuine powerhouses instead of niche alternatives.

Read more