An IPTV subscription should fit how you actually watch — not lock you into a multi-year contract for content you may not need next year. cheap-iptv.tv offers four subscription lengths, each paid once at sign-up: quarterly, half-yearly, annual and two-year. The longer the term, the lower the per-month rate, but every plan ships with an identical feature set. This page lays out the four options, explains how the one-time billing model works in practice and shows exactly how to stop the subscription when you want to — there is nothing to cancel because nothing rebills automatically. If you would rather read the operational background first, the IPTV service provider page covers who runs the service.
The four IPTV subscription options
The plan grid is intentionally simple: four lengths, four prices, identical feature parity across all of them. Pick the length that matches your committed viewing horizon — anything beyond that horizon is wasted money, and anything shorter forces an avoidable renewal step later.
| Plan | Term | Total | Per month |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bronze | 3 Months (quarterly) | £25.99 | £8.66 |
| Silver | 6 Months (half-year) | £39.99 | £6.66 |
| Gold · popular | 12 Months (annual) | £59.99 | £4.99 |
| Diamond | 24 Months (two-year) | £89.99 | £3.75 |
The quarterly Bronze subscription is functionally equivalent to paying for three months of access in a single transaction; the annual Gold subscription is a year paid up front. The two longer plans collect a deeper discount precisely because they spread the same up-front cost over more months. For the price-led version of the same comparison — focused on the lowest per-month rate rather than the most flexible term — see the dedicated cheapest IPTV page.
How billing actually works
Billing is a single transaction at checkout. Stripe and PayPal are the two supported processors, both with industry-standard PCI handling on the payment page. The card number is never seen by cheap-iptv.tv directly — it is tokenised by the payment processor, the one-time charge clears, and the token is discarded the moment the subscription is provisioned. There is no recurring authorisation stored for a future charge.
That detail matters because it removes the most common complaint about ongoing subscriptions: forgetting to cancel before a renewal. There is nothing to forget. The card and PayPal account are forgotten by the merchant within minutes of the successful transaction. If you want to renew at the end of the term, you log in to the same checkout flow and authorise a fresh one-time payment manually.
VAT is included in the headline price, not added at the end of checkout. The confirmation email serves as the VAT receipt and is downloadable for HMRC or expense purposes. Apple Pay, Google Pay and most major debit and credit cards route through the Stripe processor; PayPal balance and PayPal-linked cards route through the PayPal processor. Pick whichever channel suits your household — the subscription itself is identical regardless of payment method.
Cancellation: there is nothing to cancel
The biggest source of friction in traditional pay-TV subscriptions is cancellation. Long retention scripts, mandatory phone calls, win-back offers fired in real time while you wait on hold — all designed to delay the moment when the subscription actually stops billing. cheap-iptv.tv has none of that machinery because there is nothing to actually stop.
Doing nothing at the end of your subscription term is the cancellation. The plan expires on its end date, the credentials stop working, and no further charge ever lands. There is no subscription manager dashboard to navigate, no “are you sure?” modal to click through, no email confirmation to wait for. The absence of recurring billing turns cancellation from a process into a non-event.
For households that want to stop earlier than the natural end date, the thirty-day money-back window covers a full refund — see the refund policy for the exact terms. After the thirty-day window has closed, the plan runs to its end date and then quietly expires. There is no halfway position because there is no recurring contract to halve.
Which subscription length suits which household
The right subscription length is the one that matches your committed viewing horizon. A short-stay holiday let or a six-month rental in a furnished flat is a clean fit for the quarterly Bronze plan — the term ends naturally when the tenancy does, and there is no leftover service running for months you will not be using. The same logic applies to students living away from a permanent address during term time only.
The half-year Silver subscription works well for households with seasonal viewing habits. A six-month window can be timed to start at the beginning of a sporting season, run through the months of heaviest live broadcast, and end before the summer reruns kick in. Households unsure between quarterly and annual often land on Silver as a comfortable middle ground.
The annual Gold subscription is the natural pick for a typical residential household — a permanent home address, a settled viewing routine, family members sharing the same five-screen cap. The two-year Diamond subscription is best reserved for households that have already used the service for at least one full term and are confident they want to lock in the lowest per-month rate available on the cheap-iptv.tv catalogue.
Switching, upgrading and sharing the subscription
Mid-term plan changes are handled by the support team rather than through a self-service dashboard. The reason is straightforward: the support agent can calculate the unused value remaining on your current plan and apply it directly against the new plan in one step, which is faster and cleaner than asking a customer to navigate a portal. Upgrading from Bronze to Gold mid-term, for example, credits the unused months of the Bronze plan against the Gold purchase.
Every subscription supports five simultaneous screens on a single login, which means a typical household does not need multiple subscriptions for different family members. Parents, children and housemates each stream different channels in parallel without interrupting one another. The fifth screen is included by default, not gated behind a premium tier — the same five-screen cap applies whether the plan is Bronze or Diamond. For households that want more than five screens, the support team on the contact page can talk through second-subscription options.
The credentials themselves are portable across devices. A login that was first activated on an Amazon Fire Stick can be moved to a Smart TV, a tablet or a tvOS Devices set-up in a few seconds — no transfer fee, no support ticket needed. The five-screen cap counts concurrent active streams rather than registered devices, so a household can install the player app on a dozen devices and only the five currently playing count against the limit. The practical upshot: the subscription follows the household, not a specific TV. Moving house, switching from a rented flat to a permanent home, or running the same login across a primary residence and a holiday let does not require any administrative overhead — the new device pulls the credentials and starts streaming immediately.
Built-in parental controls travel with the subscription too. A PIN can be set against any age-rated category, locking it on devices used by children without affecting the adult logins on the same account. That means a single household subscription can serve children watching a kids' channel in one room and adults watching a film in another, without any per-profile configuration overhead.
