Everand’s new plan gives you one e‑book or audiobook for $11.99 a month, undercutting Audible’s $14.95 credit.
One Plan, Two Worlds
Everand’s 5 million‑reader base now shares a single subscription that unlocks 1.5 million titles and nearly 200 k online book clubs. The service syncs reading and listening positions across its e‑book and audiobook libraries, so a chapter finished on paper can be picked up in audio without a manual jump.
Pricing vs. Competitors
The entry‑level tier costs $11.99/month for one title, $16.99 for three, and $28.99 for five. Audible Premium Plus charges $14.95/month for a single audiobook credit, plus a streaming catalog of originals and podcasts. Everand’s bundled model therefore offers a cheaper per‑title cost while adding community features that Audible lacks.
Community Synergy and User Retention
Fable, acquired in 2025, brings 100 million ratings and reviews into Everand’s ecosystem. Last year, 820 000 Fable users joined a new club in the app, and the new subscription includes Fable Plus—advanced reading stats, custom goals, and an ad‑free experience. By merging the properties, Everand creates switching costs similar to Amazon’s Kindle‑Audible‑Goodreads stack.
Expanding Beyond the U.S.
Everand is rolling out its Standard, Plus, and Deluxe tiers worldwide, and has reworked credit rollovers to allow unused credits to carry over for six months instead of expiring at the end of the billing period. This flexibility could attract price‑sensitive users who otherwise churn after a single month.
Competitive Landscape
Spotify has entered the space with audiobooks and even physical books, offering a “page match” feature that syncs a physical book’s location with its audio counterpart. Tome’s recent shutdown underscores the crowded nature of reading companion apps, with competitors like Hardcover, Storygraph, and Margins vying for the same user base.
The Bigger Picture
Amazon’s reading empire—Audible audiobooks, Kindle e‑books, and Goodreads—has long relied on deep integration to lock in users. Everand’s bundled approach, backed by a sizable community component, could finally give a smaller player the leverage to erode that monopoly.
If the model gains traction, it may force Amazon to rethink its subscription strategy and could open the door for other niche services to compete in the digital reading market.
Source: A startup, Everand, is now bundling e-books, audiobooks, and book clubs in challenge to Amazon
Domain: techcrunch.com
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