Roku Streaming Stick 4K May pick Roku Streaming Stick 4K — one stick, 500+ free live channels, no monthly fee About $40 one-time. The Roku Channel's clean live guide beats any antenna and works on every TV. Get one on Amazon →
31,000+ ZIPs · Updated daily

What should you
actually pay for TV?

Tell us your ZIP and what you watch. We'll tell you exactly what to switch, what to keep, and how much you'd save — usually $58–$92 a month. 60 seconds. No email.

Free No email required 2 minutes
Written by

Bear & Rick

66 combined years installing cable TV and home AV.

No upsells. No sponsored picks. The same advice we'd give our own family.

Why people use it

What you'll find out

Real answers for your address, not a generic top-10 list.

This week

What's happening in streaming

The price hikes, channel moves, and deals worth knowing about.

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Deep dives

Popular guides

The long reads for when you want to actually understand the choice.

Providers we cover

Every major TV + internet provider

We've reviewed all of them. Honestly. With install context.

The differentiator

The picture quality truth nobody tells you

Cable, fiber, streaming, satellite — they don't look the same. We ranked 14 providers on what actually shows up on your TV.

See the comparison →

Frequently asked questions

How much should I be paying for TV and internet in 2026?

Most households overpay. A typical family of four pays around $190/month for cable plus streaming once promo pricing rolls off. A lean stack — fast internet, a free live TV app like The Roku Channel for locals, two streaming apps, and the occasional rental — costs about $98/month. When we audit a household, average savings come out to roughly $58–$92 per month.

Is cord cutting actually cheaper than cable?

Almost always, but not by as much as the headlines claim. Year-2 cable bills typically run $150–$220/month after promo pricing expires. A full streaming replacement (YouTube TV + Netflix + Disney bundle) runs $150–$180/month. The real savings show up when you skip a vMVPD and lean on free live TV apps like The Roku Channel + 2–3 targeted paid streaming apps.

Do I need an antenna if I already have streaming?

Not usually. "Antenna" just means getting your local channels free — ABC, NBC, CBS, FOX, and news. In 2026 you don't need a physical antenna on every TV to do that. The Roku Channel has 500+ free live channels with a clean guide where you can favorite the ones you watch. Freevee, Tubi, and built-in smart TV guides (especially Samsung TV+) work too. A physical antenna only makes sense for a single-TV setup, a rural home, or if you want the highest possible signal quality on a big 4K screen.

Will I really see my local channels on a streaming service?

It depends on your ZIP code. YouTube TV, Hulu+Live, Fubo, and DirecTV Stream all carry CBS/FOX/NBC/ABC in most markets, but coverage varies block by block. Our ZIP-based quiz checks exactly which providers and which channels are available at your address.

60s quiz → your plan