The Xbox Game Pass Ultimate has just seen another price hike. And Microsoft quietly changed the family sharing rules along the way.
Result: many players are paying full price without realizing there are legal alternatives to split the bill.
In this article, we break down the real price in july 2026, what Xbox family sharing actually allows (and its limits), and how co-subscribing can cut your monthly bill without any risk.
How much does Xbox Game Pass Ultimate cost in july 2026?
The Xbox Game Pass Ultimate costs €14.99 per month in France, the official price listed on xbox.com. Over a full year, that’s roughly 180€. No discount for annual payment: it’s a monthly subscription with no commitment, but also no loyalty discount.
For this price, Microsoft doesn’t hold back. You get a full suite of services, not just a list of games. Here’s what’s included:
- A library of console and PC games : hundreds of titles, with new Xbox releases added on day one.
- Cloud Gaming (xCloud): play on your phone, tablet, or even your browser, without installing anything.
- Online multiplayer (Xbox Live Gold) : essential for playing with friends on console.
- EA Play included: access to FIFA, Battlefield, The Sims, and other titles from the Electronic Arts catalog.
In short, it’s the equivalent of four services bundled into one subscription, all for the same €14.99 per month. Without Game Pass, you’d have to pay separately for Xbox Live Gold, EA Play, and buy games individually. The math is simple: as soon as you play 2 or 3 recent games in a year, the subscription pays for itself.
But €180 a year is still a significant expense. And if you only play a few hours a week, the value for money becomes less obvious. That’s where sharing comes in: splitting this bill among multiple players without losing access to features. The question then shifts from “how much does it cost?” to “how can I pay less for the same thing?”
Xbox Game Pass Ultimate family sharing: what Microsoft allows (and no longer allows)
Many players confuse two very different things. On one hand, there’s the native Xbox family sharing , which is limited and restrictive. On the other, there’s a true multi-household co-subscription like the one offered by Sharesub. Microsoft only allows the first.
Sharing via the home console
Xbox allows you to designate one console as your “home Xbox.” All accounts that sign in on this console get access to Game Pass Ultimate, even offline. The problem? This trick requires living under the same roof, or nearly.
- Only one household can truly benefit from this easily.
- The account holder must stay signed in regularly.
- No shared payment management between users.
This system was designed for a family under one roof. It’s not a tool for sharing among friends or strangers, and it’s definitely not a way to save money as a group without organization.
Limitations on PC, Cloud Gaming, and Microsoft accounts
On PC, things work differently. There’s no equivalent of a “home console”: each Microsoft account must have its own active subscription to play via the Xbox app or Cloud Gaming. So, it’s impossible to share a single PC subscription among multiple remote players.
Cloud Gaming follows the same strict logic: one account, one subscription. Microsoft has gradually closed the loopholes that once allowed users to bypass these rules, especially through old multi-account formulas that circulated in some communities.
Another common point of confusion: the old Xbox Live Gold familyoffer, which allowed sharing a multiplayer subscription among multiple accounts, is gone. Since its integration into Game Pass Ultimate, Microsoft has tightened the sharing rules, making old methods obsolete.
The bottom line: native Xbox sharing is useful for a couple or siblings living together. But as soon as you want to split costs with people outside your household, you need a different framework—one designed for this purpose, with automated payments and clear division among participants.
Native Xbox family sharing put to the test: what it really allows
Microsoft introduced an Xbox family group , which lets a Game Pass Ultimate subscriber share their subscription with up to 4 other accounts. On paper, it looks like a real cost-sharing solution. In practice, it’s more limited.
Here’s a concrete example. You pay for your Ultimate subscription alone, around €19.99 per month. You invite 4 accounts to your family group. According to Microsoft’s documented process in its official FAQ on family groups, these 4 accounts get access to Game Pass without contributing their share to the organizer, who remains solely responsible for the full subscription cost each month.
Here’s the catch: Microsoft hasn’t built a system for splitting costs. One account pays, everyone else benefits. This works fine in a real household, where parents and children already share expenses. But it becomes unfair if you want to share with friends or strangers who should contribute financially.
Another lesser-known constraint: the “home” console must stay regularly connected to Microsoft’s network to validate sharing. If you travel or change connections often, access can be cut off. Microsoft officially frames this feature as sharing among members of the same household, not as a co-subscription tool between multiple separate households.
The result: the native feature solves one problem (playing together under one roof) but not another: actually splitting the bill among multiple people who don’t live together. That’s exactly where structured sharing solutions step in.
How much does Game Pass Ultimate cost per person based on your sharing scenario?
The price varies a lot depending on how you share. Let’s look at three concrete scenarios to clarify.
Scenario 1: One household with a single console. You take turns playing on the same Xbox. Here, there’s no need for multiple active accounts at the same time. The cost is already naturally split among household members, with no special setup required.
Scenario 2: Console + PC players. Game Pass Ultimate covers both platforms with a single subscription. One player on Xbox and another on PC can use the same account, but be careful: simultaneous play is still limited depending on the game. Some titles block multi-device access at the same time.
Scenario 3: Friends who take turns during the week. Léa plays on Tuesday and Thursday evenings on her Xbox. Karim logs in on weekends on his PC for gaming sessions. A third player in the group finishes their sessions late at night on Cloud Gaming, directly from their phone. No access conflicts: everyone enjoys the catalog at their own pace. This is exactly the use case for co-subscription, in a real sharing group.
Here’s what it looks like in practice, with a subscription at around €17.99/month :
- Alone: €17.99/month
- With 2 people: ~€9/month per person
- With 3 people: ~€6/month per person
- With 4 people: ~€4.50/month per person
With 4 participants, you go from €18 to less than €5 per month. That’s a saving of over 70% on your subscription, without losing access to the catalog.
The only thing to manage: who pays, who collects, and who follows up in case of forgetfulness. On Sharesub, this tracking is automated. You join or create a sharing group, payments are secure, and you no longer have to chase down reimbursements every month.
Co-subscribing to Xbox Game Pass Ultimate with Sharesub
Microsoft doesn’t offer an official family plan for Xbox Game Pass Ultimate. One account, one payer. But nothing stops multiple players from sharing the costs, as long as there’s a clear framework. That’s where co-subscription via Sharesub comes in.
The principle is simple. One person already has the subscription, or wants to start one. They create a listing on Sharesub to open a sharing group. Other players join this group and pay their share each month. All of this is structured, without cash exchanges or shady bank transfers between friends.
How to create or join a sharing group
Creating a group takes just a few minutes. You specify the subscription in question, the number of available spots, and the total price. Sharesub automatically calculates each person’s share based on the official subscription price at the time the listing is created. Joining an existing group is even faster: you browse available listings, choose the one that fits your needs, and join in a few clicks.
- The group creator remains responsible for the main subscription.
- Each participant pays their share via Sharesub, not directly to the creator.
- The number of spots is limited to comply with the service’s usage terms.
Splitting payments and setting rules among co-subscribers
The most sensitive part of sharing a subscription is the money. Who pays what, when, and what happens if someone forgets? Sharesub automates this part. The monthly payment is automatically deducted from each participant at a fixed date, without the group creator having to ask for anything.
If there’s an issue, like a participant not paying or a suspended subscription, Sharesub handles refunds and adjustments without you having to intervene manually. This automated management is what sets structured sharing apart from a simple verbal agreement among friends, which often leads to tension.
This system works just as well for a group of friends as it does for strangers who meet through the platform. In both cases, the framework remains the same: secure payments, automatic distribution, and transparency about the group’s terms. You can learn how to create your own group on Sharesub.
Security and trust: questions to ask before sharing your subscription
Sharing your Xbox Game Pass Ultimate with a stranger can be scary. And that’s normal. Three questions come up all the time. Here are the answers.
Do I have to give out my Microsoft password? No. With Microsoft’s family feature, you add a member via their own account. No one needs to know your password. Your main account remains fully under your control.
What happens if the other person doesn’t pay? This is the real risk of sharing between individuals. With a self-organized group, you cover the costs and chase down reimbursements every month. On Sharesub, payments are automatically deducted from each member. You never have to remind anyone.
How can I avoid scams? The classic risk: paying your share and finding out the access has disappeared two weeks later. Sharesub structures each sharing group with secure payments and verified member identities. If a subscription is no longer available, refunds are handled automatically, with no need for friendly negotiations.
- No sharing of Microsoft passwords
- Automated monthly payments, no manual reminders
- Structured refunds in case of group issues
Legal co-subscription isn’t just about saving money. It’s also about ensuring you’re not left alone dealing with unpaid fees or sudden access cuts. This difference is what separates sharing among friends from seriously managed sharing via Sharesub.
Should you share your Xbox Game Pass Ultimate in 2026?
The answer depends mostly on your usage. If you play alone, occasionally, sharing doesn’t have much benefit. You might as well keep your solo subscription and enjoy it peacefully.
On the other hand, if you’re part of a group of regular players, or if you know other Xbox subscribers who want to cut costs, sharing the Xbox Game Pass Ultimate quickly becomes worthwhile. Splitting the price by two, three, or four makes a huge difference over an entire year.
- Worth it : regular players, households with multiple consoles, tight budgets.
- Not worth it : casual players, one session per month, no interested friends.
The real hurdle is organization. Who pays what, who follows up, what to do if someone forgets. This is where Sharesub changes the game. The platform manages the co-subscription in a structured way: automated monthly payments, clear division among sharing group members, and handled refunds if someone leaves the group.
One number is enough to decide: if you play more than 2 hours a week and know at least one other interested person, sharing becomes profitable from the second month. Below this threshold, a solo subscription remains simpler. Beyond it, every additional month widens the gap in your favor.
Want to save on your Xbox Game Pass Ultimate subscription without the hassle? Join or create a sharing group on Sharesub and let the platform handle the rest.

