Compare Broadband and TV Deals
See the broadband and TV packages available at your address – the channels in each deal are shown before you commit.
Search and compare deals from over 15 broadband providers, including
A bundle puts your internet and your TV on one bill from a single provider. Sky, Virgin Media, NOW and BT all sell broadband with a TV package, so you can stream or watch channels through the same connection you use to get online. Whether bundling beats buying the two separately depends on the channels you actually watch and the full cost of the contract. Quotezone compares broadband and TV deals from across the market, and the channels included in each one are listed before you sign up.
What you get with a bundle
A bundle combines your home internet and a television service into a single package. Here’s what that means in practice.
One provider, one bill
Your internet and your TV service come from the same provider, billed together – so there’s one account to manage and one renewal date to track.
A TV box or app
Channels arrive through a set-top box or an app on your smart TV, depending on the provider. Some are satellite or cable; others stream over your broadband line.
Channels picked at sign-up
You choose a channel package when you order. The exact channels in each deal are shown in its ‘more details’ panel on the results, so you can see what’s included before you commit.
Which providers offer broadband with TV?
Four providers on the panel sell broadband with a television package. Which reach your address depends on the networks built in your area – enter your postcode to see the live options.
Sky
Sells broadband alongside its own TV service, with channels delivered through a Sky box or app.
Virgin Media
Offers TV packages over its cable network, bundled with its broadband where the network reaches your street.
NOW
Provides streaming TV passes that pair with NOW Broadband, watched through an app or NOW device.
BT
Bundles TV with its broadband, with channels delivered through a set-top box.
When does a bundle save you money?
Bundling isn’t automatically cheaper. It pays off in some situations and not others – here’s how to tell which applies to you.
You’d pay for both anyway
If you already want a TV service and broadband, one combined package can work out cheaper than two separate contracts – and it’s simpler to manage.
You watch the included channels
A bundle only saves if you watch enough of what’s in it. Paying for sports or film channels you rarely use can cost more than a cheaper broadband-only deal plus a single streaming app.
The full contract cost stacks up
Compare the total cost over the whole contract, not just the headline monthly price. A bundle that looks cheaper month to month can cost more across an 18 or 24-month term.
What to check before you bundle
A few checks stop you paying for television you won’t use. Run through these before you commit to any package.
Which channels are included
Open the ‘more details’ panel on each deal and read the channel list. Make sure the package carries the channels you actually watch, not just a big-sounding total.
How long the contract runs
TV bundles often tie you in for 18 or 24 months. Check the term, and what the price becomes once any introductory discount ends.
The broadband speed
A TV bundle still needs a connection fast enough for your household, especially if several people stream at once. Providers quote the speed you’re likely to get at peak times, 8pm to 10pm (Ofcom).
Whether you’ll really watch it
Be honest about your viewing. If most of your watching is already on apps you pay for, a broadband-only deal may suit you better.
TV bundle vs streaming apps
Many homes now mix live TV with streaming services. Working out which side a bundle falls on for you is the key decision.
Stick with a bundle if
You want live channels, sport or a TV box in one place, and you’d watch enough of the package to justify it. One bill is simpler than juggling several subscriptions.
Go broadband-only if
Most of your viewing is on streaming apps you already pay for. A standalone broadband deal plus those apps can cost less – compare a full fibre broadband deal on its own to see.
Either way you need a TV Licence
You need a TV Licence to watch or record live TV on any channel, and to use BBC iPlayer, whether through a bundle or an app (GOV.UK).
Is a TV bundle worth it? Count the full cost
To judge a TV bundle fairly, add up the whole contract, not the first month. A 24-month deal that looks a few pounds cheaper than buying separately can cost more once any introductory discount drops off. Quotezone shows the monthly price, the full contract cost and any set-up fee for each deal, so you can compare the real total side by side rather than guessing.
Mid-contract price rises matter too. Since 17 January 2025, Ofcom has required providers to set out any in-contract price rise in pounds and pence before you sign up, instead of vague inflation-linked increases (Ofcom). That figure is shown up front on each deal, so you can factor the rise into a bundle’s lifetime cost. Weigh it against a cheaper broadband-only plan plus the one or two streaming apps you genuinely watch – sometimes the bundle wins, sometimes it doesn’t.
Switching to a new package
Moving to a new provider is straightforward. Here’s how the comparison and switch work, step by step.
Compare at your address
Enter your postcode, then add your exact address. Quotezone shows the broadband and TV packages that can actually be installed where you live, with the channels in each one.
Pick the right package
Sort and filter by price, speed, contract length and provider until you find the deal that fits – then read the channel list in its details before you choose.
Complete the switch
Click through to the provider and finish the purchase there. That starts the move under One Touch Switching, so your new provider arranges the switch and closes your old service (Ofcom).
You might also need
Setting up a new package is a good moment to protect the devices you watch and stream on.
Gadget insurance
Cover the TV box, streaming sticks, tablets and phones you watch on against damage and theft – compare gadget insurance.
Home contents insurance
Protect the tech and contents in your home, including the kit your bundle relies on – compare home contents insurance.
Broadband and TV FAQs
What is a broadband and TV bundle?
It’s a single package that combines your home internet with a television service from the same provider, on one bill. Sky, Virgin Media, NOW and BT all offer broadband with a TV package, delivered through a set-top box or an app, depending on the provider.
Is it cheaper to bundle broadband and TV?
It can be, if you’d pay for both a TV service and broadband anyway and you watch the channels included. A combined package is often cheaper and simpler than two separate contracts. But if you rarely watch the TV part, a broadband-only deal plus a single streaming app may cost less. Compare the full contract cost, not just the monthly price.
How do I know which channels are included?
The exact channels in each deal are listed in its ‘more details’ panel on the Quotezone results. Open that panel and check the channel list before you commit, so you’re paying for what you actually watch.
Which providers offer broadband with TV?
On the panel, Sky, Virgin Media, NOW and BT all sell broadband alongside a TV package. Which ones reach your home depends on the networks in your area. Enter your postcode on Quotezone to see the live options at your address.
Do I still need a TV Licence with a bundle?
Yes. You need a TV Licence to watch or record live TV on any channel, and to use BBC iPlayer (GOV.UK). That applies whether you watch through a bundle, a satellite or cable box, or a streaming app. A bundle does not include the licence fee.
Can I get a TV bundle without a long contract?
Most bundles tie you in for 18 or 24 months. Check the contract length on each deal before you sign up, along with what the price becomes once any introductory discount ends.
What broadband speed do I need for TV streaming?
Enough to stream comfortably while the rest of the household is online. Providers quote the speed you’re likely to get at peak times, between 8pm and 10pm. If several people stream at once, a faster fibre connection helps avoid buffering.
How do I switch to a new package?
Compare deals at your postcode on Quotezone, pick the package whose channels suit you, then click through to the provider to finish the purchase. That starts the move under One Touch Switching, so your new provider arranges the switch and closes your old service.
Ready to find a package with the channels you watch?
