
PlayStation Plus has implemented a fundamental change to its subscription service starting January 2026, eliminating guaranteed PlayStation 4 games from monthly lineups.
Sony confirmed the transition will prioritize PlayStation 5 titles across all tiers—Essential, Extra, and Premium—marking the most significant service evolution since the three-tier structure launched in June 2022.
Why Sony Made the Change

Sony cited shifting player behavior as the primary driver behind this decision. PlayStation 5 monthly active users surpassed PS4 users for the first time in March 2025, with approximately two-thirds of the 124 million monthly PlayStation Network users now gaming on PS5 hardware.
This dramatic shift from the 50-50 split observed in April 2024 justified refocusing subscription benefits.
What’s Changing for Subscribers

The service will no longer guarantee PS4 titles in monthly free game selections or Game Catalog additions.
While cross-generation games—playable on both consoles—may occasionally appear, the focus shifts decisively toward PS5-exclusive content. Sony stated: “PlayStation Plus is evolving with this trend and will focus on offering PS5 titles”.
January 2026 Lineup Reveals New Strategy

The first post-transition lineup includes Need for Speed Unbound (PS5 exclusive), Disney Epic Mickey: Rebrushed (PS4/PS5), and Core Keeper (PS4/PS5).
This composition demonstrates Sony’s implementation approach: one PS5-exclusive title paired with cross-generation games, providing nominal PS4 value while prioritizing current-generation hardware owners.
Impact on 51.6 Million Subscribers

PlayStation Plus maintains 51.6 million total subscribers across its three tiers. Essential tier members ($79.99 annually) face the most immediate impact, as monthly selections historically included dedicated PS4 titles.
The 24.2 million subscribers who haven’t upgraded to higher tiers will see reduced value if they remain on PS4 hardware.
Extra and Premium Tiers Affected Differently

PlayStation Plus Extra subscribers ($134.99 annually) access a catalog of approximately 667 games that will gradually shift toward PS5 content during monthly refreshes.
Premium tier members ($159.99 annually) retain access to classic PlayStation, PS2, and PSP content, but lose guaranteed new PS4-compatible monthly games. Currently, 38% of subscribers have upgraded to Extra or Premium tiers.
What PS4 Users Keep

Sony emphasized that previously claimed PS4 games remain accessible in subscriber libraries as long as active subscriptions continue. Online multiplayer functionality persists for PS4 owners maintaining Essential subscriptions.
Existing PS4 titles in Extra and Premium catalogs remain playable until they rotate out through normal content schedules. Cross-generation titles may still appear in future lineups.
Broader PS4 Sunset Initiatives

The PlayStation Plus changes complement Sony’s comprehensive PS4 wind-down strategy extending through 2026.
The company plans to sunset legacy PlayStation Network features including Activity Feed, Shared Media APIs, and storage systems starting spring 2026. Developer submission deadlines for new PS4 games reportedly occur in January 2026.
PS5 Adoption Drives Business Strategy

Life-to-date spending per console increased from $669 on PS4 to $846 on PS5—a 26% improvement driven by higher content, services, and peripheral spending. This economic profile incentivizes Sony to accelerate PS5 adoption through service differentiation.
PlayStation Plus generated approximately $3.8 billion annually as of Q1 2025, representing 33% of PlayStation Network service revenue.
Regional Disparities Create Challenges

The transition impacts global markets unevenly. In developed regions like the United States, Europe, and Japan, PS5 adoption has progressed smoothly since supply constraints eased in late 2022.
However, in emerging markets including Brazil, India, and parts of Africa, PS5 pricing remains prohibitively expensive, making PS4 a continued necessity rather than choice.
Competitive Landscape Considerations

PlayStation Plus maintains the largest gaming subscription base, exceeding Xbox Game Pass (35-37 million subscribers) and Nintendo Switch Online (34 million members).
However, Xbox Game Pass’s day-one first-party game releases create distinct value propositions. Sony’s competitive differentiation relies on exclusive content quality and catalog depth rather than simultaneous release timing.
Value Proposition for Remaining PS4 Users

PS4 owners now face strategic decisions about hardware investment. The PS5 Digital Edition retails for approximately $399, while the standard disc edition costs $499.
Major third-party publishers continue supporting PS4 for tentpole franchises, particularly sports games and live-service titles, reducing urgency for casual gamers whose interests center on annually-released content.
Industry-Wide Implications

The five-year overlap between PS4 and PS5 substantially exceeds the three-year PS3/PS4 transition period.
This elongated timeframe reflects pandemic-induced supply chain disruptions, increased development costs, and diminishing graphical improvements reducing consumer upgrade urgency. Future console transitions may similarly extend, challenging traditional six-to-seven-year console lifecycles and platform strategies.
Financial Performance Remains Strong

Subscriber churn dropped to 7.8%, the lowest point in five years, suggesting strong member satisfaction despite the transition.
PlayStation Plus Premium experienced the strongest growth among tiers, up 9% year-over-year, with 23.7 million subscribers representing 22% of the total base. Revenue performance exceeds Xbox Game Pass by approximately $1.2 billion annually.
The Path Forward

Industry analysts anticipate PlayStation 6 launching in 2027-2028 based on Sony’s historical console cycles. The PS4’s gradual wind-down through 2026 positions Sony to fully transition to PS5 before introducing next-generation hardware.
For current subscribers, the message is clear: maximum PlayStation Plus value now requires commitment to Sony’s current-generation ecosystem, signaling the formal end of the PS4 era.
Sources:
“PlayStation Plus Will Stop Guaranteeing PS4 Games Starting January 2026.” G2A News, 30 Dec 2025.
“PlayStation Plus January 2026 Game Line-Up Confirmed, Includes Need for Speed Unbound.” IGN, 31 Dec 2025.
“PlayStation 5 Monthly Active Users Finally Surpasses the PS4.” KitGuru, 15 Jun 2025.
“Sony to Mostly Drop PS4 Games from PS Plus Starting January 2026.” Push Square, 28 Jan 2025.
“PlayStation Statistics 2025: Console Sales, PSN Users, etc.” SQ Magazine, 1 Oct 2025.