Updated: Wednesday 4 April, 2012
With a free-to-view digital TV service you won’t have to commit to a contract or pay any monthly subscription - but you will get more channels than you will with free-to-air digital TV.
With a free-to-view service you won’t be restricted to just the main digital terrestrial channels because you don’t want to pay a monthly subscription. Here’s our simple guide to free-to-view digital TV.
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So, while you can access only free-to-air channels via Freeview, you can access both free-to-air and free-to-view channels via a service like Freesat or Freesat from Sky.
A range of free-to-view channels are also supplied by pay-TV providers like BT Vision (www.btvision.bt.com) and Virgin Media (www.virginmedia.com). However, access to free-to-view channels with these providers often comes via a subscription service that you will have to pay for, even though you won’t be paying for the free-to-view channels themselves.
Depending on the provider you choose, you can have anything from the 100-plus channels available from Freesat, up to the 240-plus channels available from Freesat from Sky.
You may also get access to on-demand movies or a catch-up TV depending on the provider you choose and the hardware you are supplied with.
Because when the analogue TV signal is turned off, you will have to switch to digital if you want to carry on watching TV. This means it is going to cost you whatever digital TV option you choose, but going for free-to-view will increase the range of channels you have to choose from once the digital switchover is complete.
Free-to-view digital TV will allow you to carry on watching your favourite channels, but in greater clarity, as well as giving you access to an ever-growing selection of digital-only channels, radio stations and high-definition channels.
The digital switchover began in 2008 and will end in October 2012. The switchover is being done region by region, so when you switch will depend on where you live in the UK. For a general idea of when your area is due to switch, or whether it already has, check the digital TV switchover dates. For exact dates, enter your postcode on the Digital UK website - this is the organisation overseeing the digital switchover.
Depending on the digital TV provider you choose, you will need to invest in some new receiving equipment to watch free-to-view. However, the cost of the equipment and its installation is often included in the price of the package. Your options are:
Again, this depends on which service you choose. The best way of choosing which is best for you is by comparing packages.
If you want to get Freesat then you’ll have to make a one-off payment for the set-top box, but may have to pay more for installation and connection. There is also the cost of the satellite dish to take into account.
If you go for Freesat from Sky, you’ll pay a fair bit more in terms of a one-off payment, but it truly is a one-off payment as it includes the Sky HD box, mini-dish, viewing card and installation and, of course, there are no monthly payments after that.
BT Vision and Virgin Media TV are by far the most expensive ways of accessing free-to-view TV as they involve not just a monthly subscription, but also an activation or installation fee and committing to a lengthy contract. To subscribe to BT Vision you must have a BT landline and be a BT broadband customer, while to get Virgin Media TV you will need to take a landline from the provider too.