What TV service is the cheapest? Which streaming service has ABC, NBC, CBS and Fox? Is there anything free? Here is everything sorted out so you can stop paying for channels you never watch.
Streaming services are now raising prices every 12 to 18 months โ and many people are paying for two or three services they barely use. Before subscribing to anything on this list, write down three things: the channels you actually watch every week, whether you need live TV or just on-demand shows, and whether you have a TV antenna. A $25โ$35 antenna picks up ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox, and PBS for free, forever โ no monthly bill. If you combine that with just one or two services from this list, most households can get everything they watch for under $30 a month. The average American cable bill is now over $100 per month. None of these 12 options comes close to that.
The streaming landscape in 2026 looks nothing like it did five years ago. Services that launched at $6 or $8 a month have quietly crept into the $15, $20, and $30 range โ and a live TV replacement that cost $35 in 2018 now runs $83 or more. But the cheapest end of the market has actually gotten more competitive, not less. Free, ad-supported services have matured into genuinely watchable platforms. Skinny bundles under $25 a month now carry legitimate cable channels. And if you know which services carry which networks, you can build a TV setup that costs less than $25 a month and covers most of what a typical household watches in a week. Here are the most important facts before you spend a dollar.
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What TV service is the cheapest? Tubi and Pluto TV: completely free ยท Frndly TV: $8.99/month paid ยท Sling Essentials: $19.99/month with ESPNFree wins on price, obviously โ Tubi and Pluto TV cost nothing and never will. But “cheapest” and “most useful” are different questions. For paid live TV, Frndly TV is the lowest-priced service at $8.99 per month (annual plan), built around lifestyle, history, and Hallmark channels. If you need ESPN or cable news in the mix, Sling Essentials at $19.99 a month is the cheapest way to get them. If entertainment channels like AMC, HGTV, and Comedy Central are your priority without news or sports, Philo at $33 per month covers over 70 channels and includes unlimited DVR โ more value per dollar than almost anything else in the paid category.
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What streaming service has ABC, NBC, CBS and Fox? A TV antenna (free) gets all four ยท YouTube TV, Hulu + Live TV, and DirecTV include locals ยท Sling Blue has ABC, Fox & NBC in select marketsLocal channels โ the big four broadcast networks โ are the single most important thing to check before choosing any streaming service. The cheapest way to get all of them is a one-time TV antenna purchase ($25โ$40 at most retailers), which pulls in free over-the-air broadcasts of ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox, and PBS without any monthly cost. Among streaming services, YouTube TV and Hulu + Live TV include all four major networks in most U.S. markets, but both start at $83โ$90 per month. Sling Blue includes local ABC, Fox, and NBC in select markets โ not universally. Paramount+ includes live CBS, and Peacock includes NBC programming. If locals matter most to you, an antenna combined with one cheap streaming service is almost always the smarter financial call.
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Is there a free live TV streaming service? Yes โ Pluto TV, Tubi, Sling Freestream, Roku Channel, Plex Live TV, and Xumo Play are all completely freeFree, ad-supported streaming (FAST) has grown enormously. Pluto TV offers over 350 live channels organized like a cable guide โ you scroll through and pick what’s on, exactly like old-fashioned channel surfing. Tubi has the largest free on-demand library, with tens of thousands of movies and TV shows. Sling Freestream gives you live channels and on-demand content from Sling’s catalog without paying anything. The Roku Channel bundles live and on-demand content for free on Roku devices. All of these run ads โ typically around 4 to 5 minutes per hour, significantly less than traditional broadcast TV. The tradeoff: no live sports beyond highlights, no local affiliates, and content that leans toward classic and catalogue titles rather than this week’s new episodes.
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Who is the best TV package provider for live TV under $50? Sling TV is the best under-$50 live TV package โ Sling Blue at $45.99 or Sling Orange at $45.99, each with different channel prioritiesSling TV remains the most flexible affordable live TV option below the $50 threshold. Sling Blue ($45.99/month) includes Fox News, MSNBC, CNN, NFL Network, ESPN 2, Bravo, AMC, TLC, and local ABC/Fox/NBC in markets where they’re available. Sling Orange ($45.99/month) focuses on Disney Channel, ESPN 1, and sports. Combine both for $60.99 and you get the most complete channel lineup short of YouTube TV at $83. The honest limitation: Sling only gives you 50 hours of DVR storage free, and locals are not available in every market. But for most households that want cable news, entertainment channels, and sports without spending $80+ per month, Sling Blue is the clear answer under $50.
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Can I get cable channels without a cable contract? Yes โ every service on this list is contract-free and month-to-month ยท Cancel anytime, no feesEvery streaming service on this list is a month-to-month subscription with no contract, no installation, no equipment rental fees, and no cancellation penalties. This is the single biggest structural advantage streaming has over traditional cable. Cable contracts often lock customers in for 12 to 24 months, and equipment rental fees add $10 to $15 per month on top of the advertised price. With streaming, you pay exactly the advertised price for exactly one month at a time, and you can cancel the day before your next billing cycle and owe nothing. The practical implication: you can subscribe to a service for one month to watch a specific sports season, series finale, or movie, then cancel โ a strategy cable never allowed.
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Do streaming services include a DVR? Most paid live TV services include cloud DVR โ quality varies significantly by serviceCloud DVR โ the ability to record shows and watch them later โ is standard on most paid live TV streaming services, but the generosity varies enormously. Philo offers unlimited DVR storage with recordings kept for one year โ the best in the market. YouTube TV and Hulu + Live TV also offer unlimited cloud DVR. Sling TV gives you 50 hours free and charges $5 per month for unlimited. Frndly TV’s unlimited DVR is only on the $12.99 Premium plan; the base plan keeps recordings for just 90 days. Free services like Tubi and Pluto TV have no DVR at all โ they are watch-now-or-miss-it platforms. If recording shows for later viewing matters to you, that single feature should weigh heavily in your choice between Philo and Sling.
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Can I get streaming TV discounts through my phone carrier or internet provider? Yes โ Verizon, T-Mobile, Xfinity, and others bundle streaming services at significant discountsCarrier and internet provider bundling is one of the most underused ways to cut streaming costs. Verizon currently offers Netflix and Max together for $10 per month with ads (saving $9 versus subscribing separately), along with discounted Disney bundle and YouTube TV deals with qualifying home internet plans. T-Mobile includes Netflix on select plans and offers free MLB.TV for subscribers. Xfinity’s Streamsaver bundles combine Peacock, Netflix, and Apple TV for $18 per month for Xfinity internet customers โ up to 30% savings compared to subscribing individually. If you pay for home internet, call your provider and ask specifically what streaming bundles are available for existing customers. Many people have these discounts available and never know to ask.
| Service | Starting Price | Live TV? | Local Channels? | DVR? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tubi | Free | โ On-demand | โ | โ |
| Pluto TV | Free | โ 350+ live | โ | โ |
| Sling Freestream | Free | โ Limited | โ | โ |
| Roku Channel | Free | โ Limited | โ | โ |
| Frndly TV | $8.99/mo | โ 40+ channels | โ | โ (Premium plan) |
| Paramount+ | $8.99/mo | โ Live CBS | โ CBS only | โ |
| Peacock | $10.99/mo | โ NBC + sports | โ NBC only | โ |
| Sling Essentials | $19.99/mo | โ 10+ channels | โ | โ 50 hrs |
| Philo | $33/mo | โ 70+ channels | โ | โ Unlimited |
| Sling Blue | $45.99/mo | โ 40+ channels | โ Select markets | โ 50 hrs free |
| DirecTV Genre Packs | From $20/mo | โ Genre-specific | โ Some packs | โ |
| YouTube TV Slim Plans | Mid-$50s/mo | โ 50โ70 channels | โ Most markets | โ Unlimited |
Prices verified May 2026. Streaming prices change frequently โ verify current pricing at each service’s website before subscribing.
These four platforms cost absolutely nothing. They run ads โ typically 4 to 5 minutes per hour โ but you never enter a credit card. Best used as a foundation: pair one or two free services with one inexpensive paid service and cover most of what an average household watches.
These four services offer real cable channels, live TV, or premium on-demand content for under $25 per month. Each has a specific strength โ match the service to your must-have channels rather than picking the lowest price.
These four services offer the broadest channel lineups short of full cable. If you want the cable experience without cable pricing โ entertainment channels, news, sports, and DVR โ this is where the real value is. None of them requires a contract.
The $25 setup: TV antenna (one-time, $25โ$35) + Tubi (free) + Pluto TV (free). You get ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox, and PBS live for free via antenna; thousands of on-demand movies and shows on Tubi; and 350+ live channels on Pluto TV for channel surfing. Total monthly cost: $0 (after the antenna).
The sub-$30 setup: TV antenna + Tubi (free) + Frndly TV ($8.99/month). You get all broadcast locals free, a massive on-demand library free, and live Hallmark, History, A&E, Lifetime, and Weather Channel for $8.99. Total: under $10/month.
The under-$25 setup without an antenna: Peacock ($10.99/month) + Tubi (free) + Pluto TV (free). You get NBC live, Premier League soccer, WWE, and NBC shows plus the full free on-demand and live channel libraries of Tubi and Pluto. Total: $10.99/month.
The key principle is layering a free base with one targeted paid service rather than subscribing to one expensive service trying to do everything. Most households need far less than they think they need.
What you can do: First, cancel and resubscribe. Most streaming services offer new-subscriber promotions โ and many treat anyone who hasn’t subscribed in 18+ months as a “new” subscriber. The Paramount+ promo code system, for example, periodically offers $1/month for two months to returning subscribers. Second, use your phone carrier. If you pay for a Verizon, T-Mobile, or AT&T mobile plan, check what streaming deals are included โ these are frequently underused. Third, watch one service at a time. Because there are no contracts, you can subscribe to Hulu for one month to finish a show, cancel, and subscribe to something else next month. Fourth, buy annual plans when available. Frndly TV’s annual plan saves around $12 per year versus month-to-month. When a service you know you’ll keep offers an annual option, it almost always works out cheaper.
Best devices for ease of use: Roku devices (all models) are consistently rated the most intuitive for first-time streaming users โ the remote is simple, the home screen is easy to read, and the setup takes under 10 minutes. Amazon Fire TV Stick is also beginner-friendly. Apple TV is excellent but assumes some familiarity with Apple products.
Best services for first-time streamers: YouTube TV’s interface most closely resembles what cable TV looked and felt like โ a channel guide, a grid you scroll through, DVR recordings in a familiar format. If someone is transitioning from cable and finds unfamiliar interfaces frustrating, YouTube TV reduces the learning curve significantly. Philo is also extremely clean and simple. Tubi’s interface on a Roku is nearly as straightforward as traditional channel surfing.
Most important setup tip: Choose one device, plug it in, and learn its remote before adding more services. Adding five streaming apps simultaneously is overwhelming. Start with two or three โ one free and one paid โ and expand when comfortable.
For a single TV watching in HD โ the standard experience for most households โ a 25 Mbps connection is more than sufficient. If you have multiple people streaming simultaneously on different devices, 50 Mbps handles that comfortably. Most U.S. broadband plans now advertise 100 Mbps or more, which means the average American household already has far more internet speed than streaming TV requires.
The buffering problem: If a stream keeps pausing and buffering, the cause is almost always a Wi-Fi signal issue rather than an internet speed problem. Placing your router closer to your TV, or using a wired ethernet connection from your router to your streaming device, usually resolves this. A Wi-Fi range extender ($30โ$60) also helps in larger homes where the router is far from the TV.
Data caps: Some internet plans have monthly data limits. Streaming HD TV uses roughly 3 GB per hour. A household watching 4 hours per day would use around 360 GB per month. Most modern broadband plans have caps of 1 TB or more โ enough for heavy streaming use โ but worth checking if your plan is older or from a smaller provider.
Need a TV antenna, a Roku device, or help setting up your streaming service? Use the buttons below to find electronics stores and internet providers near you.
- If you want completely free TV right now: Go to tubi.tv or pluto.tv on any browser or smart TV app store. No account required for Pluto. Takes 2 minutes. Use both โ Tubi for on-demand, Pluto for live channel browsing.
- If you need live local channels (ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox): A TV antenna is the honest answer. A $25โ$35 antenna from Walmart, Target, or Best Buy picks up broadcast networks free and forever. No monthly bill. Pair it with Tubi or Philo for cable content.
- If Hallmark, History, A&E, or Lifetime is your main viewing: Try Frndly TV at $8.99/month. It has a 7-day free trial โ you’ll know immediately whether the channel lineup fits your habits.
- If you want cable channels without sports or news: Philo at $33/month is the best deal in paid streaming. Over 70 channels, unlimited DVR for a full year, and Max plus discovery+ included. First month often $25.
- If you want ESPN, CNN, and local channels in one place under $50: Sling Blue at $45.99 is the realistic answer. Check sling.com to confirm which local channels are available in your market before subscribing.
Pricing verified May 2026. Streaming service prices, channel lineups, and promotional offers change frequently โ sometimes without advance notice. Always confirm current pricing directly on each service’s official website before subscribing. Free trial availability varies and may require a payment method on file. All services listed are month-to-month with no long-term contract unless otherwise noted. Channel availability, particularly local broadcast channels, varies by geographic market โ verify local channel availability for your zip code at each service before subscribing.