Short answer: for most Canadian households, IPTV costs a fraction of cable — often $14–$20 a month versus $60–$100+ for a traditional cable package — while working on any device with no lock-in contract. Cable still wins on a few things, like guaranteed local channels and bundled internet. Here’s the honest breakdown.
Cable bills have crept up for years, and a lot of Canadians are asking the same question: am I paying too much for TV I barely watch? Let’s do the real math.
The quick math
A typical Canadian cable-TV package — once you’re past the promo period — runs roughly $60 to $100+ per month, and Canada’s regulator has tracked these prices for years. Add equipment rental, add-on tiers and taxes and the real number climbs. StreamQ starts at $14/month with no equipment to rent. Over a year, that’s the difference between roughly $170 and $1,000+.
Side-by-side: IPTV vs cable
| Cable TV | IPTV (e.g. StreamQ) | |
|---|---|---|
| Typical monthly cost | $60–$100+ | $14–$20 |
| Contract | Often 1–2 years | Month-to-month |
| Equipment | Rented set-top box | None — your own devices |
| Extra rooms | Extra box + fee each | Add connections to your plan |
| Setup | Technician visit | 5-minute app install |
The 5-year picture
Stretch it out and the gap compounds. At ~$85/month, cable costs about $5,100 over five years. IPTV at ~$15/month is closer to $900 — and with no contract, you’re never locked into that spend.
Watch the hidden cable fees
The advertised cable price is rarely the bill. Common extras: box rental ($10–$20/month per room), regional sports or premium add-ons, install and activation fees, and the post-promo price jump after year one. IPTV avoids most of these.
What you actually get for the money
- Channel range — IPTV carries a far wider spread of live channels, plus on-demand and international content, in one subscription.
- Devices — watch on your TV, phone, tablet or a streaming stick; cable ties you to the box in one room.
- Contracts — most IPTV is month-to-month; cable often locks you in.
- Setup — IPTV is a quick app install (see our setup guide); cable needs a technician and a rental box.
Where cable still wins (the honest part)
Cable still has real advantages: guaranteed local and regional channels, bundling discounts with home internet, and a single provider to call when something breaks. According to Statistics Canada, many households still keep a traditional TV subscription — often for exactly these reasons. If you value them, cable earns its keep.
Where IPTV wins
For most households the appeal is simple: lower cost, more flexibility, and no contract. A bigger channel range, on any device, and you can walk away any month. For international or multi-language content, IPTV usually covers far more than a standard cable tier.
Who should switch — and who shouldn’t
- Switch fully if your priority is the lowest monthly bill and the widest content on devices you already own.
- Go hybrid (keep internet, drop the TV tier, add IPTV) if you rely on bundled internet but want to kill the cable TV cost.
- Stay on cable if guaranteed local channels and one-call support matter more than price.
How to switch in 4 steps
- Keep your internet — IPTV runs over it.
- Start a free trial and test IPTV on your main TV for a day.
- Pick a plan with enough connections for your household.
- Then cancel the cable TV tier once you’re happy. Test before you cancel.
Start your free 24-hour trial → See plans →
Frequently asked questions
Is IPTV cheaper than cable in Canada?
Usually, yes. IPTV often runs $14–$20/month versus $60–$100+ for cable, with no box rental or contract.
Do I need to cancel my internet to switch?
No — IPTV runs over your existing internet. Many keep internet, drop the cable TV tier, and add IPTV.
Will IPTV work on my current TV?
Yes, with a cheap streaming stick like a Firestick, or directly on most smart TVs. See our setup guide.
Is the picture quality as good as cable?
On a stable connection, IPTV streams in HD and 4K. A wired connection gives the most consistent quality.
What’s the catch with cable’s low advertised price?
It’s usually a promo rate. After year one the price jumps, and box rental, taxes and add-ons inflate the real bill.
Can I switch back if I don’t like it?
Most IPTV is month-to-month, so there’s no lock-in. Start with the free trial before committing.
StreamQ is an IPTV provider; channels and streams are provided by third parties. Pricing accurate as of June 2026 and may change.



