Audible's content includes more than 200,000 audio programs from audiobook publishers, broadcasters, entertainers, magazine and newspaper publishers and business information providers. Content includes books of all genres, as well as
radio shows (classic and current), speeches, interviews,
stand-up comedy, and audio versions of periodicals such as
The New York Times and
The Wall Street Journal. The service offered two monthly subscription tiers, "Audible Gold" and "Audible Platinum," priced at $14.95 and $22.95 USD respectively: Both services allow users to obtain credits which can be used to purchase audio books (one whole credit for Gold, and two whole credits on Platinum), while Platinum also included additional incentives such as exclusive discounts. On August 24, 2020, Audible replaced both plans with "Audible Premium Plus" (a renaming of Gold, though with the Platinum pricing and credits grandfathered for existing subscribers), and introduced a new $7.95 subscription tier known as "Audible Plus." Both tiers include access to a curated on-demand library of audiobooks, podcasts, and other original productions, while the Audible Plus tier does not include credits. Once a customer has purchased a title, it remains in that person's library and can be downloaded or streamed at any time. He resigned in 2018 after the original podcast staff at Audible were laid off. In 2016, the service introduced an on-demand service known as "Audible Channels," which features short-form audio programming from various outlets, including news and other original productions. Access is included as part of Audible's subscription, and also became available to
Amazon Prime subscribers. Nuzum compared this strategy to original content created by
HBO or
Netflix, and stated that the service deliberately avoided use of the word "
podcast" as to not alienate listeners unfamiliar with the concept. Among its original productions are
Where Should We Begin?, a relationship podcast with
Esther Perel;
Sincerely, X, a podcast featuring anonymous
TED Talks;
Ponzi Supernova, a chronicle of the
Madoff investment scandal;
The Butterfly Effect, a podcast series by
Jon Ronson chronicling the impact of
PornHub on
internet pornography; and
West Cork, a
true crime podcast investigating an unsolved 1996 murder in
West Cork, Ireland. In August 2018, it was reported that Nuzum was stepping down, and that Amazon had laid off most of the short-form content staff. This move came amid a shift in Audible's original content strategy, including a greater focus on "audiobook-first" deals with writers. The service added a new tier for subscribers to access Audible Originals, announced in fall 2020, called Premium Plus, including over 11,000 titles (as of the launch). These titles included earlier original material, plus new audio productions featuring such creators as
Common,
Jamie Lee Curtis,
Kate Mara,
Harvey Fierstein,
Michael Caine and
Jesse Eisenberg. More recent releases include Newark Mayor
Ras Baraka's memoir and two works by
Brown Sugar screenwriter
Michael Elliot. In 2024, Audible announced new audio projects including an audio adaptation of
George Orwell’s
Nineteen Eighty-Four titled "1984" starring
Andrew Garfield,
Cynthia Erivo,
Andrew Scott and
Tom Hardy.
Kerry Washington and
Daniel Dae Kim performed main roles in an adaptation of the
Broadway play
David Henry Hwang's "
Yellow Face" exploring themes of
cultural appropriation. ==Device support==