Subscribing to NI is easy
Subscriptions to our monthly magazine, The New Internationalist, can be ordered on-line through our secure shopping site. Just choose your nearest country and we'll be delighted to welcome you. New Internationalist magazine has won many awards, but none more prized than our 60,000 enthusiastic subscribers worldwide. You may like to read what some of them say about New Internationalist magazine.
Click here to subscribe to the electronic edition of NI. Every page of the magazine is reproduced in its original full-colour design so that it looks exactly like the printed magazine. What's more it offers a range of useful enhancements. The content is fully searchable, the contents page is linked and all email addresses and webpages are clickable hyperlinks. The electronic edition can be read on the web or on Apple's iOS devices, such as the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch - to use these, download this free app and enter your digital subscription details within it.
To subscribe to the paper edition, simply click on the country
you live in, or the one closest to you.
Benefits of Subscribing to the NI with this offer
A big saving off the newsstand price.
You receive our amazing world map.
You’ll also get one of our great No Nonsense Pocket guides.
You help support an independent magazine.
And most importantly you help give a voice to those who are often ignored by the mainstream media.
What they say about the NI
"If you would like to know something about what’s actually going on, rather than what people would like you to think was going on – then read the New Internationalist”
Emma Thompson, actress
"For many years I have read the NI with great respect. Many an article I have written, and film I have made, have had their roots in something I read in the NI."
John Pilger, journalist
"It explains and clarifies all the confusions and contradictions we encounter daily in the media's international news coverage"
Julie Christie - actress
"New Internationalist is a magazine well worth reading as it respects the intelligence of its readers. It is independent, lively and properly provocative, helping to keep its readers abreast of important developments in parts of our globe that risk marginalisation. Read it!."
Desmond M Tutu, Archbishop of Cape Town