Twitter prices Blue for Android at $11 per month; launches annual web plan

The higher pricing for Android users is likely to offset fees charged by Android’s Google Play Store, like Apple’s App Store. (AFP/File)
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Updated 19 January 2023
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Twitter prices Blue for Android at $11 per month; launches annual web plan

  • The once-exclusive blue check mark is now available to anyone willing to pay
  • Company also actioned off 'surplus corporate office assets'

LONDON: Twitter Inc. said on Wednesday it would price Twitter Blue subscription for Android at $11 per month — the same as for iOS subscribers — while offering a cheaper annual plan for web users when compared to monthly charges.
The blue check mark — previously free for verified accounts of politicians, famous personalities, journalists and other public figures — will now be open to anyone prepared to pay.
It was rolled out last year to help Twitter grow revenue as owner Elon Musk fights to retain advertisers.
Google’s Android users will be able to purchase Twitter Blue’s monthly subscription for $11, the same price as for Apple’s iOS users, Twitter said on its website.
The higher pricing for Android users is likely to offset fees charged by Android’s Google Play Store, like Apple’s App Store.
The annual plan for subscription to Blue, only available on the web, was priced at $84, a discount to the monthly web subscription price of $8.
Twitter did not respond to a request for comment on its Android pricing strategy.
The discount for web users would be available in countries including United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Japan, New Zealand and Australia, Twitter said.
Earlier in December, Musk added that Twitter’s basic blue tick will have half the number of advertisements and the social media platform will offer a higher tier with no advertisements by next year.
The announcement comes amid growing uncertainty over Musk's strategy Musk which focuses on massively reducing costs while building up revenue.
On Wednesday the company auctioned off furniture, decorations, kitchen equipment and more from the tech firm's downtown San Francisco headquarters.
The online auction of "surplus corporate office assets" included a Twitter bird statue that fetched $100,000, a 10-foot neon light in the shape of Twitter's bird logo, which sold for $40,000, bicycle-powered charging stations, pizza ovens and espresso machines.

With agencies


Media watchdog urges probe after gunmen attack home of Pakistani journalist

Updated 27 February 2026
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Media watchdog urges probe after gunmen attack home of Pakistani journalist

  • Ihsan Khattak’s home came under fire by gunmen in February
  • CPJ, 17 rights groups say legal and other changes causing ‘fear’

LONDON: Media watchdog the Committee to Protect Journalists on Friday urged Pakistani authorities to investigate a shooting attack on the home of journalist Ihsan Khattak.

On Feb. 12, at about 9:45 p.m., unidentified gunmen opened fire on the main gate of Khattak’s house in Kotka Jandar Khel village in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Bannu district. The assailants fled and Khattak was not injured.

“Pakistani authorities must thoroughly investigate the attack on Ihsan Khattak’s home, identify the gunmen, and hold them to account,” said the CPJ’s Asia-Pacific Director Beh Lih Yi.

“Khyber Pakhtunkhwa has become increasingly dangerous for journalists and this type of brazen intimidation cannot stand. Journalists must be able to work safely so they can provide the public with information.”

Khattak, a Bannu-based correspondent for ARY News and former president of the Bannu Press Club, has faced threats before.

On Feb. 5, three armed men on a motorbike followed him from a reporting assignment, forcing him to speed away in his car, he told the CPJ.

In 2017, after receiving threats from an unknown caller, he relocated to Islamabad. He said the threats resumed after he returned to Bannu in 2023.

Bannu Deputy Inspector General of Police Sajjad Khan told the CPJ that an investigation had been opened into the shooting and that police were committed to ensuring journalists’ security.

The incident comes as the CPJ and 17 other press freedom and human rights groups this week urged Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif to take urgent steps to “uphold the country’s constitutional and international obligations” to protect media freedom.

They warned that recent legal and institutional changes, combined with “persistent failures” to hold perpetrators accountable, have deepened a climate of fear for journalists.

Pakistan, ranked 158th in the 2025 press freedom index, is considered one of the world’s most dangerous countries for journalists, with growing self-censorship, digital controls and widespread impunity for attacks on media workers.

The appeal also follows a sharp escalation in regional tensions: on Friday, Pakistan said it had carried out strikes on Taliban government forces in several Afghan cities — its first direct attacks on its former allies —describing the situation as “open war.”