Cable TV bills have been climbing pastcurrent pricing per month for years while streaming options have improved to the point where most households lose nothing by cutting the cord. The right combination of streaming device and live TV service covers everything a cable subscription did - often at a fraction of the cost.

The five picks below cover both the hardware and service sides of cord-cutting, so you can build the right setup regardless of whether you’re watching on a big screen, following live sports, or prioritizing budget.

ProductBest ForKey Feature
Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K MaxAll-in-one cord-cuttingAlexa integration, 4K support
Roku UltraMost streaming channel optionsWidest app ecosystem
Apple TV 4KApple ecosystem householdsSeamless Apple device integration
YouTube TVLive TV cable replacement100+ live channels, cloud DVR
Sling TV Blue + OrangeBudget live TV streamingCheapest live TV package

Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K Max

The Fire TV Stick 4K Max is Amazon’s flagship streaming stick and one of the most capable cord-cutting devices available for its price. It supports 4K HDR and Dolby Vision content, integrates Alexa voice control for hands-free navigation, and handles every major streaming app without any sluggishness. If you’re an Amazon Prime member, the integration is seamless. This is the one streaming stick most households should buy first.

Pros: 4K HDR + Dolby Vision support, Alexa voice control, excellent app selection, strong value

Cons: Interface leans heavily toward Amazon content recommendations; not ideal for non-Prime households

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Roku Ultra

Roku consistently offers the broadest streaming channel selection of any platform, and the Roku Ultra is the top-tier version of their proven streaming hardware. The neutral platform approach means Roku doesn’t push any particular streaming service - you see everything equally. It also includes a private listening headphone jack, ethernet port for wired connections, and a lost remote finder. For households that use a wide mix of services, Roku’s open ecosystem is hard to beat.

Pros: Widest streaming app ecosystem, neutral platform (no bias toward one service), ethernet port, excellent remote

Cons: No hands-free voice assistant built in; interface can feel cluttered with sponsored content rows

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Apple TV 4K

Apple TV 4K is the premium cord-cutting device for households already invested in Apple’s ecosystem. The integration with iPhone, iPad, AirPlay, and iCloud is seamless in ways that competing devices simply can’t replicate. The device runs smoothly, supports the highest video and audio quality standards, and the Apple TV+ service is one of the best original content platforms available. The hardware premium is worth it specifically for Apple households.

Pros: Best Apple ecosystem integration, premium build quality, excellent AirPlay support, top-tier video/audio quality

Cons: Significantly more expensive than competing devices; less value outside the Apple ecosystem

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YouTube TV Subscription

YouTube TV is the most straightforward cable replacement for households that want live TV without the hardware overhead. The 100+ channel lineup includes local broadcast networks, cable news, sports channels, and entertainment networks that closely mirror a traditional cable package. The unlimited cloud DVR is a major advantage over cable’s DVR storage limits. You can subscribe and cancel monthly with no contract, which makes it easy to subscribe around sports seasons or major events.

Pros: 100+ live channels, unlimited cloud DVR, no contract, includes major sports networks, easy to use

Cons: Price has increased significantly from launch; adding premium channels adds up quickly

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Sling TV Blue + Orange Plan

Sling TV is the most budget-friendly path to live TV streaming and the combined Blue + Orange plan gives you the most flexibility within the Sling lineup. Orange includes ESPN, Blue includes more news and lifestyle channels - together they cover a strong cross-section of what cable delivered. The price point is significantly lower than YouTube TV and Hulu Live, making Sling the practical choice for budget-conscious cord-cutters who still want live television access.

Pros: Lowest price of any live TV streaming service, no contract, reasonable channel selection with both plans

Cons: Channel selection is narrower than YouTube TV; simultaneous streams are limited without upgrades

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What to Look For

Device vs. smart TV: If your TV is 3-5 years old, a dedicated streaming device like Roku or Fire TV will be faster and better-supported than your TV’s built-in apps. New smart TVs (particularly those running Roku TV or Google TV) may not need a separate device.

Internet speed: Streaming 4K content requires at least 25 Mbps; HDR content benefits from 50 Mbps or more. Check your current internet plan before cutting the cord to ensure you won’t buffer.

Live TV needs: If you watch live sports or news regularly, a live TV streaming service (YouTube TV, Sling, Hulu Live) is worth the monthly cost. If you’re primarily watching on-demand content, Netflix/Prime/Disney+ subscriptions are sufficient.

Contract terms: All major streaming services are month-to-month. Take advantage of this by rotating subscriptions based on what you’re actually watching rather than keeping everything active simultaneously.

Final Thoughts

Start with an Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K Max if you want the best all-in-one hardware value and you’re an Amazon Prime member. Go with Roku Ultra if you want the most neutral, widest-selection streaming experience. Budget households that primarily want live TV can build a complete setup with just acurrent pricing digital antenna for locals, a budget Roku stick, and Sling TV’s Blue + Orange plan. YouTube TV is the closest true cable replacement for households who want maximum live channel coverage with minimal setup complexity.

Frequently asked questions

What do I need to cut the cord from cable TV?+

At minimum you need a streaming device (or a smart TV with built-in apps), a broadband internet connection of at least 25 Mbps for HD streaming, and a streaming service subscription. If you want live local channels, add a digital antenna. Most cord-cutters combine a hardware device like Roku or Fire TV Stick with one or two streaming service subscriptions to cover their viewing needs.

Is cutting the cord actually cheaper than cable?+

For most households, yes - streaming services typically costcurrent pricing per month combined versuscurrent pricing for a cable bundle. However, costs can creep up as you add more services. The key discipline is to subscribe only to the services you actively use and cancel others when you finish a season or series, rather than keeping everything running simultaneously.

Can I get live sports without a cable subscription?+

Yes, though it requires some planning. YouTube TV, Hulu Live, and Sling TV all carry major sports networks including ESPN, FS1, and regional sports networks on some plans. For NFL games, a digital antenna covers free over-the-air broadcasts. Some sports are also available directly through league streaming apps. The landscape has improved significantly for sports fans cutting the cord.

Independent video for additional perspective on 5 Best Ways to Cut the Cord of 2026 | Top Streaming Devices & Services.

Third-party YouTube content. Watch on YouTube.
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Author

David Lin

Smartwatches, Wearables & Smart Garden Editor

David Lin reviews smartwatches, fitness trackers, smart garden devices, and emerging home technology at The Tested Hub. With a background in electrical engineering and years of hands-on wearable testing, David brings an engineer's eye to how accurately these gadgets measure heart rate, GPS, soil moisture, and everything in between. He focuses on real-world performance so readers know what holds up beyond the spec sheet.