Updated June 12, 2026. A practical buying guide for eligible 18-to-24-year-olds, students, and parents helping them decide.

My daughter is 19, which puts her exactly in the audience for Prime for Young Adults. So I looked at this less like a generic subscription deal and more like a parent asking a simple question: would she actually use it enough to justify keeping it after the trial?

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My Quick Take

Yes, I think Prime for Young Adults is worth trying if you qualify. The six-month $0 trial makes the first decision easy. The real decision is whether the paid plan still makes sense before renewal.

For my daughter, the value is not one single feature. It is the mix of shipping, Prime Video, everyday basics, and food delivery perks that makes it feel useful.

I would not keep it just because it is discounted. I would keep it if she is actually ordering the things she already needs, watching Prime Video, or using Grubhub+ enough to replace another paid perk.

Young adult comparing budget notes and online shopping from a laptop in a dorm room
The real question is not whether the discount sounds good. It is whether the membership fits how a 19-year-old actually shops, streams, and handles everyday basics.

Best starting point

Check Prime for Young Adults eligibility

Start with Amazon's official eligibility page. Amazon will show the current trial, renewal price, and verification requirements for your account.

See Prime for Young Adults

Affiliate link. Eligibility, trial availability, and benefits are determined by Amazon at signup.

What My 19-Year-Old Would Actually Like About It

The big headline is the discount, but that is not what makes the membership useful day to day.

At 19, the practical wins are smaller and more frequent: ordering a charger without waiting a week, getting basic toiletries, replacing headphones, grabbing school supplies, or watching something without adding yet another streaming app.

The food-delivery side also matters. Amazon currently points to Grubhub+ as part of Prime, with $0 delivery fees on eligible orders. For a college student or someone in a first apartment, that is more realistic than pretending the membership is only about textbooks and dorm supplies.

The thing I like as a parent is that this is easy to evaluate during the trial. If she barely uses it, cancel. If it quietly saves time every week, the discounted plan starts to make sense.

How Much Is Prime for Young Adults?

Amazon's public page currently says eligible new members can try Prime for Young Adults for six months for $0.

After the trial, Amazon lists the membership at $7.49 per month or $69 per year. That is roughly half the standard Prime price, based on Amazon's own public language.

I would still set a renewal reminder on day one. A discounted subscription is still a subscription, and it is easy for a free trial to become background noise.

Use caseWhy it mattersMy take
College dorm or first apartmentFrequent small orders, personal care, cables, supplies, and basics.Strong fit
Prime Video watcherStreaming can justify part of the membership before you count shipping.Often worth it
Prime Day shopperDeal access plus temporary cash-back categories can add value if they were buying anyway.Good seasonal value
Rare Amazon buyerThe trial is easy to test, but paid renewal may not be needed.Cancel if unused
Already covered by familyCompare actual benefits before adding another paid membership.Check first

Who Is Eligible?

Amazon says Prime for Young Adults is for young adults ages 18 to 24 and higher-education students.

Amazon's public page says young adults can verify age with an identity document such as a driver's license, passport, or identity card. Higher-education students can verify with a .edu email address.

If your son or daughter is right on the edge of eligibility, do not guess. Use Amazon's official signup flow and let Amazon confirm whether the account qualifies.

Young adult using a laptop with delivery boxes, takeout, headphones, and a streaming screen nearby
For a 19-year-old, the useful parts are usually practical: delivery, streaming, occasional food delivery, and everyday essentials.

Prime for Young Adults vs. Prime Student

This is a slightly confusing naming shift. Amazon's public messaging now emphasizes Prime for Young Adults, while some signup paths still use Amazon Student-style URLs.

For the buyer, I would not worry too much about the naming. The important question is whether Amazon shows the six-month trial and discounted young-adult pricing for your account.

You can also check Amazon's alternate signup route here: Amazon Prime student/young-adult signup.

How I Think About The 5% Cash Back

Amazon's public announcement says Prime for Young Adults members can earn 5% cash back for a limited time on categories including beauty, apparel, electronics, and personal care.

That sounds useful because those are exactly the kinds of things a 19-year-old may already buy. But I would treat it as a bonus, not the core reason to sign up.

The simple rule: use cash back on things they needed anyway. Do not buy extra stuff just to feel like the membership is paying for itself.

When I Would Skip It

I would skip or cancel after the trial if my daughter was not using Amazon delivery, Prime Video, Grubhub+, or Prime-exclusive deals.

I would also skip it if she already gets enough value through a family setup. Paying for duplicate benefits is where these subscriptions get sneaky.

How To Sign Up

  1. Open Amazon's Prime for Young Adults page.
  2. Sign in to the Amazon account that will use the membership.
  3. Complete Amazon's age or student verification.
  4. Confirm the trial, renewal price, and benefits shown at checkout.
  5. Add a reminder before the paid renewal date.

For source details, I checked Amazon's public announcement: Amazon's Prime for Young Adults overview. For broader Prime benefit context, see Amazon's Prime benefits guide.

Bottom line

If your kid is 18 to 24 and already uses Amazon, I would try it. For my 19-year-old daughter, the six-month $0 trial is the cleanest way to see whether the benefits are real or just another subscription.

Check Prime for Young Adults eligibility

FAQ

Is Prime for Young Adults the same as Prime Student?

Amazon's current public messaging uses Prime for Young Adults for eligible 18-to-24-year-olds and higher-education students. Some signup URLs may still use Amazon Student wording, but Amazon's eligibility flow is what matters.

How much is Prime for Young Adults?

As of Amazon's June 2026 public page, eligible new members can try it for six months for $0. After the trial, Amazon lists $7.49 per month or $69 per year.

Who can get Prime for Young Adults?

Amazon says the offer is for eligible young adults ages 18 to 24 and higher-education students. Verification happens through Amazon during signup.

Does Prime for Young Adults include Prime Video?

Yes. Amazon's public page says Prime for Young Adults includes the same Prime membership benefits, including Prime Video.

Is the 5% cash back permanent?

Amazon describes the 5% cash back on selected categories as limited time. I would treat it as an extra benefit, not a guaranteed permanent feature.

Joseph Nilo, video producer and creator workflow writer
About the Author

Joseph Nilo has been working professionally in all aspects of audio and video production for over twenty years. His day-to-day work finds him working as a video editor, 2D and 3D motion graphics designer, voiceover artist and audio engineer, and colorist for corporate projects and feature films.