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How to sign up for Amazon Prime

Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

This year, Amazon’s Prime Day sales will be coming on October 13th and 14th — three months later than usual, due to the coronavirus pandemic. (And yes, Prime Day is actually two days.) If you’re attracted by the goodies being offered, but you haven’t signed up for Amazon Prime, don’t worry — Amazon makes it very easy. (As you’d expect, it’s the sorry vendor who makes it difficult for people to become new customers.)

Besides giving access to Prime Day bargains, Amazon has come up with a bunch of features to entice people to sign up to its Prime service. These include: access to Prime Video, its streaming video service; free and faster shipping on purchases (with two-day delivery for many items and even same-day delivery for some); deals on Whole Foods Market purchases; Prime Music audio streaming (not to be confused with the more extensive Amazon Music Unlimited, which is an additional $7.99 / month for Prime members); Prime Gaming, which includes free Twitch games; online photo storage; and Prime Reading, which gives access to a library of comics, books, and magazines.

You can share your Prime account — and all of its features — with one other adult. And you get a 30-day free trial, so you can try it (and the Prime Day specials) out to see if it suits.

Here’s how to sign up.

Amazon Prime plans
Besides its basic plan, Amazon offers video-only and plans for students and EBT / Medicaid users.

Choose a plan

Create an account

We should probably mention the obvious: you can sign up for a Prime membership, take advantage of the free 30-day trial, and then cancel it after the Prime Day sales are over. But you can only do that once — and you may regret that decision next year when Prime Day comes around again.

Update September 30th, 2020, 10:30AM ET: This article was originally published on July 10th, 2019, and it has been changed to reflect updated information about Amazon Prime.

Original Article

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