You know everything is more expensive these days, including how much you pay to watch TV. If one of your New Yearâs resolutions is to slash your streaming bill but find a way to still see your favorite shows, Consumer Reports shares five tips.
1. You can become a service hopper, subscribing to a service, binging on all the shows you want to watch, and then canceling. There are apps and websites like JustWatch and Reelgood that keep track of the shows and movies you want to see and let you know when they become available on the streaming services you use.
2. Consider a cheaper tier. Not long ago, streaming services offered only one price option. Now, many companies have added cheaper plans. Shows may come with commercials, but youâll pay less. For example, Disney+ Premium is $13.99 a month. The basic plan is nearly half that at $7.99 a month.
3. To keep track of all your streaming subscriptions, consider moving them to one credit card.
4. Each month, review every service youâre paying for and determine whether youâre still using it enough to justify the cost. This can also help you catch any price hikes.
5. You can save the most by using a free streaming service, like Pluto TV, The Roku Channel, or Tubi. These services have classic shows and movies, plus some original content too. In exchange for watching, though, youâll have to put up with ads.
Share log-ins while you still can. Most services control account sharing to some degree by limiting the number of people who can access the service at any one time.
How to Replace Cable TV for Less Than $25 a Month
A lot of us are looking for ways to trim our monthly expensesâand ditching costly cable or satellite TV services is a great place to start. Those services can easily cost more than $100 a month.
Unfortunately, streaming video services can be a significant expense, too, especially if you subscribe to several of them. Many of the best-known services, including Apple TV+, Disney+, Hulu, and Netflix, recently raised their prices. And the same goes for services designed to replicate traditional TV packagesâDirecTV Stream, Fubo, Hulu + Live TV, and YouTube TV. Most of them now cost $65 per month or more.
What if youâre prepared to pay only half that? Can you still find a compelling assortment of content complete with local broadcasts?
Believe it or not, the answer is yes. We managed to assemble a decent TV plan on an ultratight budget of just $25 per month, despite recent price hikes.
The package includes Disney+, NBCUniversalâs Peacock, and Paramount+. It wonât fit every need, and it doesnât allow you to watch every popular show out there. Notably, we didnât include Amazon Prime or Netflix, which many people already pay for alongside a cable or satellite package. You might add one of those services, or Apple TV+ or Max (as HBO Max is now called), and make some swaps and still end up with a low monthly budget.
Because these services donât require a contract, more people these days are âsubscription hopping,â or jumping into and out of streaming services on a monthly basis, to save money. For example you might sign up for a month of Apple TV+ and binge-watch the last season of âTed Lasso,â then drop it to watch âSuccessionâ on Max. The following month you may decide to replace Max with Paramount+ to catch âMission: ImpossibleâDead Reckoning Part One,â once it hits that service.
Hereâs another money-saving tip: If you live in a metropolitan area, you might be able to get even more programming free of charge with an inexpensive indoor TV antenna.
Setting those considerations aside, hereâs what you get with our three streaming picks, for a total bill of $25 per month or less.
Paramount+
Letâs start with Paramount+, which replaced CBS All Access as the companyâs streaming platform in 2021, because it seems like a no-brainer for sports fans. It has a deal to show all the local-market NFL games on CBSâ schedule through 2033, plus NCAA basketball and PGA golf, including the Masters and the PGA Championship.
It also provides full-length episodes of CBS shows and new original programming, plus livestreams of local CBS affiliates in many markets.
The big news for the company is that it has merged its Showtime premium service into a new Paramount+ tier, called Paramount+ With Showtime.
Currently, Paramount has two subscription options. If you can live with a few advertisements, the Paramount+ Essential plan costs only $6 per month ($60 for a year if you pay up front). Or you can watch (mostly) ad-free on the Paramount+ With Showtime plan for $12 a month ($120 if you pay annually). In addition to the advertisements and Showtime, the other big difference is that you donât get your live local CBS station (except for NFL games) with the Essential plan. The pricier tier also lets you watch shows in 4K HDR (including Dolby Vision), and get mobile downloads.
Both services give you access to all shows from CBS, more than 3,500 episodes from BET, Comedy Central, MTV, Nickelodeon, Paramount, the Smithsonian Channel, and other jointly owned properties. Paramount+ also has a growing number of original shows, such as âFatal Attraction,â a series based on the 1987 movie; âSpecial Ops: The Lioness,â from Taylor Sheridan; and â1923,â a series starring Harrison Ford and Helen Mirren thatâs derived from the popular âYellowstoneâ series.
Current big movies include âTop Gun: Maverick,â âEverything Everywhere All at Once,â âDungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves,â and the latest iteration of âScream.â Early in 2024 youâll be able to watch âMission: ImpossibleâDead Reckoning Part One.â
Total cost: With the Essential tier of Paramount+ onboard, weâve now spent $6 of our $25 budget, leaving $19.
Disney+ Bundle
Given the assortment of high-powered entertainment brands under the Disney umbrella, it should be no surprise that weâre adding Disney+ next.
Disney recently started offering a less expensive, ad-supported plan. Unfortunately, it costs $8 per monthâwhich had been the price of its ad-free plan. For ad-free Disney+, you now have to pay $11 a month, or $110 if you pay annually. That has made us rethink our approach to Disney+ just a bit.
Still, Disney+ is compelling. The company owns Lucasfilm (the âStar Warsâ franchise), Marvel Studios (âThe Avengers,â âBlack Pantherâ), and Pixar (âToy Story,â âUpâ). The recent acquisition of 20th Century Fox gives it 20th Century Studios (âThe Simpsonsâ) and the lionâs share of National Geographic content too.
Disney+âs updated library of content includes such movies as âIndiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny,â âPercy Jackson and the Olympians,â and âAvatar: The Way of Water.â Series include a second season of âLokiâ; âThe Beatles: Get Back,â from Peter Jackson; and the popular series âThe Mandalorian,â set in the âStar Warsâ universe. Coming shows include âEcho,â a Marvel series thatâs an offshoot of the âHawkeyeâ series.
While Disney+ is pretty compelling on its own, weâve decided to splurge on one of the bundles Disney offers with Hulu and ESPN+.
Huluânow wholly owned by Disneyâfills a pretty big hole with content from popular broadcast and cable channels. Some shows can be watched in real time, but most are available either one day or one week later. Thatâs a good way to get programming from ABC, AMC, Bravo, Big Ten Network, CBS, E, ESPN, Fox, Fox Sports, FX, NBC, NFL Network, Oxygen, PBS, Syfy, and USA Network. Hulu is also home to originals such as âThe Bearâ; âOnly Murders in the Building,â based on the novel; and âThe Handmaidâs Tale.â Note, however, that many NBC shows are now available only on Peacock.
ESPN+ adds sports to the mix, including everything from Major League Baseball to college football and basketball, hockey, soccer, and UFC fights. You also get access to documentaries such as the â30 for 30âł series.
There are now three plan options. Duo Basic, which costs $10 a month, gives you the ad-supported versions of both Disney+ and Hulu. Trio Basic adds ESPN+ with ads, for $13 month. A premium version of the bundle, called Trio Premium, has ad-free Disney+, ad-free Hulu, and ESPN+ for $20 a month.
To keep the price down, weâd suggest getting one of the ad-supported versions of the bundles. Weâve picked Trio Duo, but you can add ESPN+, for an additional $3 a month, if youâre a die-hard sports fan.
Total cost: With Paramount+ and the $10 price for the Trio Basic Disney+ bundle, weâve now spent $16 of our $25 monthly budget. That doesnât leave much money for a third service, but read on.
Ad-Supported Peacock Premium
Peacock, which launched nationally in 2020, is a great way to round out a $25-per-month package with NBC and Bravo shows, plus Universal movies.
Unlike the services above, Peacock had offered a free ad-supported tier in addition to two paid tiers. The company recently did away with the free tier for new subscribers, but people currently on the free plan can keep it.
The paid tiers are $6 per month ($60 annually), with ads; and $12 a month, ($120 annually) without ads. And we think theyâre worth the moneyâespecially that $6 tier.
To start, you get exclusive next-day access to current NBC and Bravo shows, now that a deal with Hulu is expiring. Better yet, you get the full complement of programming from NBCUniversalâs properties: Bravo, Syfy, Telemundo, USA Network, and Universal Studios. Peacock now has a deal with Universal that sees that companyâs new movies stream exclusively on Peacock after leaving theaters. The deal includes movies such as âCocaine Bear,â âRenfield,â âJurassic World: Dominion,â and âMinions: The Rise of Gru.â
Peacock is also licensing shows from ABC, A&E, and Fox. And it has a deal with Paramount to add content from CBS, Paramount, Showtime, and Viacom, plus movies from Blumhouse, DreamWorks, Focus Features, Illumination, Universal Pictures, and Warner Bros.
Peacockâs original programming is a third great reason to subscribe to a Premium plan. Original series include âYellowstoneâ; âThe Continental,â based on the world of John Wick; and âPoker Face,â starring Natasha Lyonne. New movies include âFive Nights at Freddyâs,â âFast X,â and âMr. Monkâs Last Case,â based on the âMonkâ cable series.
For sports fans, Peacock streams Premier League soccer games, golf tournaments, and WWE Network matches. It also recently signed an extension with the NFL to show Sunday night NFL games that air on NBC through 2033.
Total cost: By adding Peacock to the plan at $6 per month, weâve raised the total to $22, leaving us with a few dollars for popcorn.
So How Did We Do?
In the end, we proved that itâs possible to get a fully featured TV plan for less than $25 per month. In fact, if you were able to get the free version of Peacock before it ended and itâs meeting your needs, you can pay even less.
On the other hand, if you want CBS broadcasts and Showtime, we recommend stepping up to the $12-a-month Paramount+ plan with Showtime, which would bring your monthly total to just over $30 a month.
Youâll end up paying a bit more if you opt for one of the ad-free Disney+ bundles we mentioned above, or if you add Max, though that service now has a cheaper ($10 a month) ad-supported plan. For a lot of us, though, thatâs still quite a bargain compared with a typical pay TV package.
However you decide to put together your own package, you get a pretty compelling assortment of broadcast TV, cable content, movies, sports, and live events.
And donât forget that you can supplement everything here with the classic TV shows and movies offered by free ad-supported streaming services such as Pluto TV, Tubi, and Xumo.
Of course, we know that some people do need to get live local broadcasts. Depending on where you live, you might be able to do that free by using an antenna.