He checked Nissan’s website: after the trial, NissanConnect Services costs roughly or $119 per year for the Premium plan (prices vary slightly by model and region). There’s no contract—you can subscribe monthly, annually, or cancel anytime.
Mark learned that NissanConnect isn’t a single product. It’s a suite of services split into two main categories: and NissanConnect Services .
The first piece of good news: basic NissanConnect features are free. Every Nissan with the system includes standard infotainment functions like AM/FM radio, Bluetooth hands-free calling, audio streaming, and vehicle settings. You don’t pay a cent for those. Even the built-in navigation—if your trim has it—works indefinitely for on-screen maps and route guidance.
However, Mark learned that without a subscription, features like Destination Assist (live agent route help), Google™ Send-to-Car , and Remote Vehicle Find would disappear from his app.
And that’s the full story behind the question every Nissan owner eventually asks.