Most people assume AARP is for retirees and get surprised when the card shows up in the mail at 49. The reality is stranger and more useful: anyone 18 or older can join right now, the first year costs less than a fast-food lunch, and some of the most valuable perks have nothing to do with age. Here’s what’s actually worth your $15 β and what isn’t.
AARP dropped its original name β the American Association of Retired Persons β decades ago, for good reason. A significant share of its nearly 38 million members are still working. The minimum age to join is 18, not 50. The reasons people under 50 actually find it worthwhile are rarely the ones in the brochure: it’s not just the hotel discounts or the magazine. It’s the $15 that buys you a year of prescription savings tools, a spare membership for your spouse or partner at no extra cost, and quiet access to Medicare guides and estate planning resources you’ll genuinely need sooner than you expect. The discount catalog is real but secondary. This guide breaks down which situation actually makes the membership pay off β and which does not.
There are no tiers or benefit levels based on which plan you choose β every plan gives you identical access to all AARP benefits. The only difference is how many years you’re committing to. A second membership for any household member is always included at no extra cost on any plan.
| Plan | Total Cost | Cost Per Year | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1-Year (Auto-Renew) Try First | $15 first yearThen $20/year Β· Cancel anytime | $15 (yr 1), $20 after | First-timers who want to test the benefits before committing |
| 1-Year (Standard) | $20/yearNo auto-renewal required | $20 | Anyone who prefers not to set up automatic billing |
| 3-Year Membership | $55 one-timeSaves 8% vs annual rate | ~$18.33 | People who’ve already used the benefits and want to lock in the rate |
| 5-Year Membership | $79 one-timeSaves 21% vs annual rate Β· ~$1.32/mo | ~$15.80 | Long-term members who use multiple benefits regularly and want the best value |
Some new members notice an increase in marketing mail β physical and digital β after signing up. This is a commonly reported frustration. The fix: use a secondary email address when you register, then log in to your account after joining and update your communication preferences to opt out of marketing. You can also call AARP’s customer line at 1-888-687-2277 and ask to be placed on their do-not-mail, do-not-call, and do-not-email lists. It takes a few weeks to clear the pipeline, but it does stop.
People searching AARP want specific answers, not general descriptions. Each question below gets a short direct answer first, followed by the context that actually determines whether it applies to your situation.
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Can I join AARP if I’m under 50? Yes β the minimum age is 18, not 50 Β· Under-50 members are “associate members” but access nearly all the same discounts and benefits Β· A few age-restricted insurance products are the only exceptionAARP dropped its original age restriction long ago. Anyone 18 or older can join today, receive a membership card immediately (digital version available the same day), and start using discounts right away. Under-50 members are technically classified as associate members, but in practice the difference is minor β it affects a handful of insurance products tied to age-specific underwriting rules, like some auto or life insurance policies that require the policyholder to be 50 or older. Every other benefit β travel discounts, dining offers, prescription tools, fraud protection, caregiving resources, the free second household membership β is fully available regardless of your age. The $15 first-year cost for a new member under 50 is identical to what a new 65-year-old pays.
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What is an AARP membership actually good for β what do real members use it for? Travel discounts (hotels up to 25% off, car rentals up to 30% off) Β· Prescription savings card (usable at most major pharmacies) Β· Free second household membership Β· Movie tickets at AMC, Regal, Cinemark up to 25% off Β· Restaurant discounts at 7,000+ locations Β· The $15 first-year cost often gets covered by one hotel stayThe travel benefits are where the most consistent real-world savings happen. Members save up to 25 percent on hotels at chains like Hilton, Best Western, and Radisson, and up to 30 percent on car rentals at Avis, Budget, and Payless. One modestly priced hotel stay for a weekend trip frequently covers the entire annual membership cost. The prescription discount card β usable at Kroger, Walgreens, Walmart Pharmacy, and most other major pharmacies β regularly beats cash prices on common medications, which is useful at any age. Movie tickets at most national theater chains run up to 25 percent cheaper with the membership. Restaurant discounts cover over 7,000 locations nationwide, including 10 percent off at popular chains. The free second household membership means a couple gets two cards for the price of one β effectively $7.50 per person in the first year if you share with a partner or spouse.
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Is there a downside to joining AARP? Marketing mail (email and physical) is the most common complaint β manageable by opting out Β· Some members object to AARP’s policy advocacy Β· A handful of benefits require separate enrollment steps Β· The magazine is not for everyoneThe marketing mail issue is real and worth knowing upfront. After joining, some members report a noticeable uptick in promotional mailers and insurance offers β both physical and digital. The fix requires active opt-out steps, not passive waiting. The second concern that comes up is political: AARP advocates actively on issues like Social Security funding, Medicare policy, drug pricing, and caregiver legislation. If those advocacy positions conflict with your own views, the membership carries some of that identity baggage whether you use the policy resources or not. Beyond those two, the practical downsides are minor: some discounts require a separate registration step or a specific portal rather than just flashing a card, and a few of the best-sounding benefits have restrictions buried in the fine print. The AARP Smart Driver course, for example, delivers real value β completing it may qualify you for a multi-year auto insurance discount β but you have to actually take the course, not just be a member.
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Does Netflix give an AARP discount? No β Netflix does not offer an AARP member discount Β· AARP has no current partnership with Netflix Β· Streaming discounts through AARP focus on other services, not Netflix specificallyThis is one of the most Googled AARP questions, and the answer is a clean no. Netflix does not participate in the AARP discount program and has not established an AARP partnership for reduced pricing. AARP’s entertainment benefits lean toward movie theaters, live events, and in some cases other streaming platforms β but Netflix is not among them. If you’re specifically looking for a Netflix discount, that doesn’t come through AARP. However, if the question is broader β can AARP save me money on entertainment generally β the answer is yes, through movie ticket discounts at major theater chains, free virtual movie screenings through AARP’s Movies for Grownups program, and various entertainment retailer offers. It just doesn’t include Netflix by name.
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What is the cheapest way to get an AARP membership? $15 for the first year with automatic renewal enabled Β· Multi-year memberships: $55 for 3 years, $79 for 5 years Β· Watch for promotional pricing β AARP runs limited-time offers periodically that can reduce costs further Β· The second household membership is always freeThe absolute lowest price is the $15 first-year offer with automatic renewal, which reduces the standard $20 rate by 25 percent. AARP also runs limited-time promotions that occasionally push prices lower β a 5-year membership sometimes appears on sale at $63 instead of the standard $79. For those who know they’ll keep the membership long-term, the 5-year option at roughly $15.80 per year locks in the best ongoing rate. Signing up online is the fastest way to get your digital card and start using benefits the same day. Physical cards typically take about three weeks to arrive in the mail. Regardless of plan length, the free second household membership doubles the value if you have a spouse or partner β effectively splitting the annual cost between two people without any additional charge.
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What AARP benefits actually make sense if you’re in your 30s or 40s? Travel and car rental discounts pay off quickly at any age Β· Prescription savings card is immediately useful Β· Free second household membership stretches the value Β· Caregiving resources if you’re helping an aging parent Β· Estate planning and will guides if you’ve been putting those offThe honest answer for someone in their 30s or 40s is that the Medicare guidance and Social Security calculators are still too early to matter much β those benefits are built for people within 5 to 10 years of those decisions. What does land at any age: the travel and hotel discounts are not age-gated and work the same whether you’re 35 or 65. The prescription savings card is a genuinely useful tool for anyone paying out of pocket for medications or trying to compare prices across pharmacies. If you’re in the sandwich generation β caring for young children while also helping aging parents navigate doctors and medications and decisions β AARP’s caregiving resource library and the family caregiver guides are some of the most practical free tools available. Will and estate planning guides are also available to members, which matters for anyone in their 40s who has been putting those conversations off. At $15 for a full year, the question isn’t really whether any single benefit justifies it β it’s whether any one of them gets used even once.
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Does AARP membership include insurance β and is it good? AARP is not an insurance company Β· It endorses plans underwritten by The Hartford (auto and home), New York Life (life insurance), Delta Dental, VSP (vision), and HearUSA (hearing) Β· Members get access to these programs and potential discounts β but should still compare rates independently before buyingAARP lends its name to insurance products but doesn’t underwrite any of them β the actual insurance is provided by established insurers. The Hartford handles auto and home policies under the AARP name, New York Life handles life insurance, Delta Dental covers dental, and VSP handles vision. The auto insurance option is specifically restricted to members age 50 and older, which is one of the genuine age-gated limitations for younger members. For those over 50, The Hartford program is frequently competitive and the AARP association appears to result in real savings for many members β average reported savings figures have ranged up to several hundred dollars annually on auto coverage compared to prior policies. For anyone under 50, the insurance angle is largely irrelevant for the most promoted products, though the AARP Prescription Discounts program through Optum Rx and the roadside assistance option through Allstate starting at $5.50 a month have no age restriction and are available immediately.
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Is AARP vs. AAA β which is the better membership to have? They serve different core purposes: AAA is built around roadside assistance and automotive services Β· AARP centers on discounts, advocacy, Medicare/Social Security guidance, and caregiving resources Β· Both have travel benefits Β· AAA costs $65β$125/year vs AARP at $15β$20 Β· Some people carry bothAAA and AARP get compared constantly but they’re not really competing for the same job. AAA’s core value is its roadside assistance network β towing, battery jump, flat tire help, lockout service β which is nationwide, well-established, and the reason most people pay for it. AARP does offer roadside assistance through Allstate at $5.50 a month, but that’s an add-on to the broader membership rather than AARP’s primary purpose. AARP’s core value is the discount network, advocacy for policy issues affecting older adults, and the Medicare and Social Security guidance tools. AAA costs $65 to $125 a year depending on the tier β compared to AARP’s $15 to $20, there’s no comparison on price. If roadside assistance is your primary concern, compare both programs directly before deciding β AAA’s network and response times are more established in most markets. If you travel frequently and want both the discounts and the roadside backup, carrying both memberships costs less than most people’s monthly streaming subscriptions combined.
AARP hosts free local events β including fraud prevention workshops, Social Security planning sessions, and Medicare enrollment guides β in every state. Use the buttons below to find events, AARP offices, and senior resources near you. Membership not required to attend most events.
- Step 1: Do you travel and book hotels at least twice a year? If yes, check whether one hotel reservation at a member rate would cover the $15 first-year cost. It almost always does.
- Step 2: Do you have a spouse or partner who would use a membership card? AARP’s free second household membership means two people get full benefits for what amounts to $7.50 per person in year one.
- Step 3: Are you helping care for a parent β coordinating doctors, medications, or insurance? The caregiving resource library and prescription comparison tools are worth checking before making any decision.
- Step 4: Are you within 10 years of Medicare eligibility? If so, start using the Medicare guides now β decisions made before enrollment have permanent cost consequences, and the free AARP resources are among the clearest plain-language explanations available anywhere.
- Step 5: If you join, use a secondary email address and immediately update your communication preferences in your account β or call 1-888-687-2277 to opt out of marketing mail before it starts. This removes the most common complaint about the membership before it becomes a problem.
AARP membership pricing, benefits, discount availability, and partner programs are set by AARP and its partners and may change at any time. All prices and benefit descriptions reflect current published information as of June 2026 and should be verified directly at aarp.org before making a membership decision. This page has no commercial relationship with AARP, any insurance carrier, or any discount partner mentioned. Discount availability and amounts vary by location, partner participation, and individual circumstances.