3rd April, 2026
Is Streaming Killing Free-to-Air TV in Australia? (The Truth for 2026)
If you’ve noticed your Netflix bill quietly climbing every few months, you’re not imagining it. Since 2015, the average cost of a Netflix ad-free plan in Australia has risen by 88%, and that’s before you factor in Disney+, Stan, Binge, HBO Max, or Prime Video.
Meanwhile, free-to-air television – channels 7, 9, 10, ABC, and SBS – costs you exactly nothing. Every single month. Forever.
So is streaming actually replacing free TV in Australia, or are people being sold a very expensive myth?
The Real Cost of Going Streaming-Only in Australia in 2026
Here’s where the numbers get uncomfortable for streaming enthusiasts.
As of late 2025, Australian households spent an average of $21.63 per month on video streaming subscriptions, according to a Westpac survey – and that figure reflects a single service. Most households subscribe to two or more.
The current pricing landscape looks like this:
- Netflix Standard – $20.99/month
- Disney+ Standard – $15.99/month
- HBO Max Standard – $15.99/month
- Stan Standard – $17/month
- Binge Standard – $19/month
If you subscribe to just three of these at the standard tier, you’re looking at $52-$57 per month, or $624-$684 per year – just to watch TV.
And if you subscribed to all the major platforms at their cheapest tier? That’s approximately $92 per month, or over $1,100 per year.
By comparison, a professional antenna installation from Mr Antenna is a one-time cost. Pay once. Receive free-to-air channels forever.
What You Actually Miss Without Streaming
To be fair, streaming platforms offer genuine value that free-to-air doesn’t match. Premium drama, international series, Netflix originals, and on-demand flexibility are real advantages – nobody is arguing otherwise.
But here’s what streaming consistently fails to deliver for Australian audiences:
Live sport. The AFL, NRL, cricket, tennis, and the Olympics are all broadcast live and free on channels 7, 9, and 10. Streaming’s live sport offering is either behind a separate paywall, fragmented across multiple platforms, or buffering at precisely the wrong moment during a grand final.
Breaking news. When something major happens, Australians still instinctively turn to free-to-air. ABC News 24 remains the go-to source for live national coverage – available at no cost through your antenna.
Reliability during peak times. Internet congestion during evenings affects streaming quality. An antenna signal operates completely independently of your internet connection – no buffering, no quality drops, no outages because the neighbourhood is all online at once.
Local content. Australian drama, local news, and regional programming live overwhelmingly on free-to-air. Most streaming platforms have significantly reduced their investment in Australian original content.
So Is Free-to-Air TV Actually Dying?
No – and the data is clear on this.
According to OzTAM, free-to-air television still reaches more than 13 million Australians every week. The AFL Grand Final, State of Origin, and Australian Open tennis finals routinely attract 2-4 million concurrent viewers on free-to-air channels. No streaming event in Australia has come close to those numbers.
What is changing is the assumption that free-to-air television delivers poor picture quality. Modern digital broadcasting is transmitted in full HD. With a correctly installed antenna, the picture you receive on channels 7, 9, 10, ABC, and SBS rivals – and in many cases exceeds – what streaming services deliver at standard definition settings on a typical home internet connection.
The Smarter Approach Most Australian Households Are Taking in 2026
Rather than treating this as an either/or decision, most Australian families have settled on a hybrid approach: a quality antenna for live sport, news, and free daily programming – paired with one carefully selected streaming service for specific on-demand content.
The antenna handles the heavy lifting for everyday viewing. The streaming service fills the gaps for content they specifically want. The combined annual cost is a fraction of subscribing to four or five platforms simultaneously.
Why the Antenna Installation Has to Be Done Right
There’s one important catch with this strategy: a poor quality antenna, or one that hasn’t been correctly installed, makes free-to-air television genuinely frustrating to watch. Pixelation, signal dropouts, and missing channels are almost never caused by the broadcast signal itself – they’re almost always the result of an aging antenna, damaged cabling, incorrect positioning, or an installation that wasn’t done properly to begin with.
A modern digital antenna, professionally installed and correctly positioned by a licensed technician, delivers consistent full-HD free-to-air reception with no signal issues. If your antenna is more than 8-10 years old, or if you’re regularly experiencing signal problems, it’s worth getting it assessed before assuming free-to-air isn’t working for you.
Get a free antenna inspection and quote from Mr Antenna
Streaming is not killing free-to-air TV in Australia. What it has done is train a generation of viewers to pay – and pay increasingly large amounts – for something that was always available for free.
Free-to-air television in 2026 is sharper, more reliable, and more content-rich than it has ever been. For live sport, news, and everyday viewing, it remains the most cost-effective television option available in Australia. Streaming fills the gaps for on-demand content. As a complete replacement? The numbers simply don’t support it.