I Cancelled Cable in 2026 — Here’s What Actually Happened

I put off cancelling cable for almost two years. Not because I loved it — nobody loves paying $140 a month for 200 channels they never watch — but because the idea of "figuring out streaming" felt like a project I didn't have time for. Turns out, I was overthinking it. Big time.

Quick answer: I cancelled cable in March 2026, switched to a mix of streaming apps and an IPTV service, and ended up paying about a third of what I used to pay — while actually watching more of what I want. The switch took less than an hour. The only real adjustment was figuring out which app to open for what.

If you're sitting where I was a few months ago, here's the honest, no-fluff version of what happened.

Why I Finally Cancelled Cable

The breaking point wasn't even the price increase (though that didn't help). It was opening my bill one morning and seeing a $9.99 "broadcast TV fee" — a charge for channels that are free over the air — sitting right next to a $7.50 "regional sports fee" for a sports package I never used.

That's when I started looking seriously at cable alternatives that USA providers actually offer. I wasn't trying to become a tech person overnight. I just wanted live TV, my local channels, and sports — without the fee circus.

The Cable Alternatives I Tried First

I'll be honest — my first attempt wasn't great. I tried stacking three separate streaming apps (one for live local channels, one for sports, one for everything else), and within a week, I had three different logins, three different remotes basically, and somehow I was paying almost as much as cable again once you added it all up.

That's when a friend mentioned IPTV services — basically one app, one login, thousands of channels, including local and international, sports, and on-demand content. I was skeptical. It sounded like one of those "too good to be true" things you see in a random YouTube ad.

So I did what I always do before spending money: I tested it for free first.

What Switching to IPTV Actually Looked Like

Setup took less time than I expected — about 15 minutes on my Fire TV Stick, plus another 10 on my phone so I could watch in the kitchen while cooking (something cable never lets me do without paying for an extra box).

A few things stood out right away:

  • My local news and network channels were all there — the exact thing I was worried about losing.
  • Sports channels actually loaded fast, no weird 10-second buffering before kickoff.
  • I could pause and rewind live TV, which my old cable box technically did too, but it always lagged.

The app I ended up sticking with was IPTV Smarters Pro — simple, clean, and it didn't try to overwhelm me with settings I'd never touch.

The Surprising Part Nobody Warns You About

Here's what genuinely surprised me — and it's not what you'd expect.

I assumed the hard part would be the technical setup. It wasn't. The hard part was habit. For the first week, I kept reaching for the cable remote out of muscle memory. Old habits are weirdly stubborn.

The second surprise: international channels. I have family overseas, and cable charged an extra $25/month for a "world channels" add-on that included maybe 15 channels in total. With IPTV, I had access to hundreds of international channels included in the base plan — channels I didn't even know I'd want until I started flipping through them.

The third thing — and this one's less fun — is that not all IPTV services are created equal. Some of the free or super-cheap options I tried were constantly buffered during live sports, which honestly defeated the whole purpose. Stability mattered more than I expected.

My Monthly Live TV Plan Now vs Before

Here's the side-by-side that actually convinced me to stop going back and forth:

Before (Cable):

  • Base package: $89.99
  • Broadcast TV fee: $9.99
  • Regional sports fee: $7.50
  • Equipment rental (2 boxes): $19.98
  • Taxes/misc fees: ~$12
  • Total: ~$139.46/month

After (IPTV):

That's roughly $109 saved every single month — over $1,300 a year. For the same (honestly, more) content.

Was It Worth It? My Honest Verdict

Yes — but with one caveat. If you go this route, don't pick the cheapest, sketchiest-looking service just to save a few extra dollars. The one or two bad experiences I had early on were both with services that looked legit on the surface but couldn't handle live sports without constant buffering.

Once I switched to a more reliable provider, the experience genuinely felt better than cable — more channels, more flexibility, lower cost, and no surprise fees.

If you're on the fence, my advice is simple: try a free trial first, test it during a live sporting event (that's where weak services fall apart), and go from there.

👉 Curious if it'll work for your setup? Try a free 24-hour trial with FireLiveTV and see for yourself before committing to anything.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it actually worth cancelling cable in 2026?

For most people, yes — especially if your cable bill includes broadcast fees, regional sports fees, and equipment rentals, which can easily add up to $50+ on top of the base price. IPTV and streaming alternatives typically cost a fraction of that for similar or better content.

What happens to my local channels if I cancel cable?

Most IPTV services include local network channels (ABC, NBC, CBS, FOX, etc.) as part of their standard packages, so you don't lose access — you may just access them through an app instead of a cable box.

Do you miss cable after switching?

Honestly, the only thing I missed was the muscle memory of using a single remote. Content-wise, I have access to more channels now than I did before, including international options I didn't have at all on cable.

How much does IPTV cost compared to cable?

On average, IPTV plans run between $20–$35/month, depending on the provider and package, compared to $100–$150+/month for cable once fees and equipment rentals are included.

Is switching to IPTV complicated?

Not really — most setups take 15–20 minutes on devices like a Fire TV Stick or Smart TV, and many services offer free trials so you can test everything before committing.