Streaming platforms in Austria
In Austria a lot is covered by the ORF fee. See what is worth adding on top and what needs a VPN.
The smart way to pay for streaming in Austria
Start from what you already pay for. Through the ORF fee, ORF ON carries a large amount of shows, films and sport, and ServusTV is free on top, so the real question is what to add. Most households keep a few paid services and the bill creeps up, so the trick is a small core plus one service you switch on for a series and cancel. Everything in the grid below is available where you are, so treat this as a shortlist, not the full shelf.
Pick by what you actually watch
- Local and free: ORF ON through the ORF fee and ServusTV with no subscription, plus the German Mediatheken ARD and ZDF.
- Box sets and prestige drama: Netflix and HBO Max, which launched in Austria in January 2026, cover most of it.
- Families: Disney+ for Marvel, Pixar and Star Wars, and Prime Video if you already pay for Amazon delivery.
- Football, Formula 1 and skiing: the ADMIRAL Bundesliga is on Sky via Sky X and WOW, with four live matches on ORF, while ServusTV and ORF share alpine skiing and Formula 1.
- Free commercial TV: Joyn bundles ProSieben, SAT.1 and Kabel Eins live, and RTL+ has a free, ad-supported tier.
- More free and niche: Pluto TV for FAST channels, Canal+ and MUBI for cinema and Crunchyroll for anime.
Where the savings actually hide
Two habits cut the bill more than any deal. Lean on ORF ON, ServusTV and the German Mediatheken first, since they fill most evenings through the fee or for free. Then rotate the paid ones, keeping one anchor and switching others in for a series before cancelling. For anything you keep all year, an annual plan usually beats paying by the month.
KT1, also called Kärnten 1, is the largest private regional channel in Carinthia, southern Austria, based in the state capital Klagenfurt. It has been on air since 1999 and is run by KT1 Privatfernsehen GmbH. The channel is free and ad-supported, offering regional Carinthian news in Kärnten aktuell along with sport, culture and reportages. KT1 streams worldwide through its website kt1.at, and is also carried on Austrian cable and IPTV platforms including A1 TV, Magenta and the Astra satellite, as well as SimplyTV since 2025.
Kino VOD Club is an Austrian arthouse video service, run from Vienna by Cinema Service Platform GmbH and open to the public since 2017. Its catalog gathers more than 700 Austrian feature films, shorts, and documentaries with German subtitles. There is no subscription. Instead, you rent a single title on a pay-per-view basis: once you press play, you get 48 hours of unlimited viewing, and the film stays in your library for up to 60 days. One detail sets it apart: a third of every rental fee goes to an Austrian cinema you choose, so watching at home directly supports local theaters. The service is available in Austria only, through the web with Chromecast and AirPlay.
Run by Vienna-based Sportradar since 2001, LAOLA1 pairs an Austrian sports streaming service with a busy news portal. The free, ad-supported side carries live matches, highlights, live tickers and reporting across Austrian football, beach volleyball from the win2day Beach Tour, volleyball, handball, basketball, motorsport and La Liga highlights. A paid LAOLA1 PREMIUM tier adds HD, far fewer ads, livestreams inside the mobile apps, dynamic rewind, AirPlay and reminders. From the 2026/27 season most second-division fixtures sit behind a paywall, though the round’s top match and all highlights stay free. Rights are geo-restricted per competition.
LT1 is the largest private regional broadcaster in Upper Austria, based in the state capital Linz. It has been on air since 1996, originally under the name TV3, and has carried the LT1 brand since 2001. The station is run by LT1 Privatfernsehen GmbH and is free and ad-supported. Its programming focuses on the region: news in OÖ Aktuell, local sport including OÖ Fußball and the HC Linz, plus lifestyle and cooking shows such as OÖ Life and OÖ kocht. You can stream it for free through the Mediathek at lt1.at and on YouTube.
Sky X is Sky’s Austrian streaming service, run entirely through an app with no dish or satellite box needed. Anyone in Austria can sign up and watch on the web, phone, Apple TV, games consoles or Samsung and LG smart TVs. The line-up splits into three packages: Fiction for series and films including Sky Originals and HBO titles, Sport for live action, and the Kombi bundle that joins both. On the sport side you get the Austrian ADMIRAL Bundesliga, Formula 1, tennis and the Champions League, though the latter only through the 2026/27 season. Picture quality tops out at 1080p Full HD with no 4K, and one stream at a time. It is a paid subscription needing an Austrian payment method, and you can watch up to 30 days anywhere in the EU. Outside the bloc it is blocked, so from further afield a VPN with an Austrian server shifts only your virtual location. A switch to the WOW brand is planned for autumn 2026.
Tirol TV is a Tyrolean infotainment channel based in Innsbruck, Austria, best known for its flagship magazine show Tirol Today. Since 2023 it has been owned by Moser Holding AG, the publisher of the Tiroler Tageszeitung, and it belongs to the R9 Österreich alliance of regional broadcasters. Founded in 1997, it relaunched in 2014 after an insolvency. The channel is free and ad-supported, mixing infotainment around politics, society, sport and culture with reportages and regional news. You can stream it for free at tiroltoday.at and through the R9digital app.
W24, known as Wiener Stadtfernsehen, is the municipal city channel of Vienna, Austria. It is operated by WH Media GmbH, a company within Wien Holding, the holding group owned by the City of Vienna. Launched in 2005, it switched to a full 24 hour schedule in 2012. The channel is free and ad-supported, broadcasting local Vienna news around the clock alongside city culture such as the Popfest Wien festival and the Fasching carnival, regional sport and local magazine shows. You can watch it free at w24.at and via its app, as well as on Joyn, simpli.tv and Austrian cable.
CANAL+ is the Austrian pay-TV and streaming service run by the Canal+ Group, rebranded in June 2024 from the former HD Austria. It blends old-school satellite television with a modern app. The CANAL+ Total package bundles more than a hundred channels including ORF, over forty premium stations, films, series and selected live UEFA top fixtures, while the lighter Kombi keeps things to around thirty channels. There is also a streaming-only Filme & Serien tier that runs through the app with no satellite dish and serves up exclusive films, series and Canal+ originals. Watch on the web, iOS, Android, Apple TV, Fire TV, Chromecast and smart TVs, in 4K via satellite or up to Full HD in the app. It is a paid subscription with a twelve-month minimum term and is built for Austria. From abroad you connect through a VPN with an Austrian server, and you still pay for your own CANAL+ plan.
ORF ON is the free streaming service of ORF, Austria’s public broadcaster, and it took over from the old ORF-TVthek in May 2024. You get live channels (ORF 1, ORF 2, ORF III and ORF SPORT+) plus a deep catch-up library: Austrian series, films, documentaries, children’s programmes, ZIB news, culture and sport, from alpine skiing to football. There is no subscription and nothing to pay; the platform is covered by the household ORF-Beitrag fee. Since the 2024 broadcasting law, programmes stay online far longer than the old seven-day window, and some titles turn up a day before they air on TV. The catch is geography: most live and sport content is locked to Austria. From abroad you reach ORF ON with a VPN set to an Austrian server, which gives your connection an Austrian IP.
PULS 4 is Austria’s free-to-air commercial entertainment channel, funded by advertising and run by the ProSiebenSat.1 PULS 4 group in Vienna. It took its current name in 2008, having grown out of the earlier Puls TV. The schedule mixes drama, films, reality, news and documentaries, with familiar titles such as the startup show 2 Minuten 2 Millionen, the breakfast programme Cafe Puls and the political debate Pro und Contra. From the 2027/28 season it holds the Austrian free-TV rights to the UEFA Champions League final and the UEFA Super Cup. You watch the live stream through the Joyn platform on the web, mobile, Apple TV, Fire TV and smart TVs, in roughly HD. The stream is limited to Austria and Joyn does not officially support VPNs, so from abroad you need a VPN with an Austrian server to set your virtual location. The channel itself stays free.
simpli is an Austrian television service operated by ORS, the broadcast arm of public broadcaster ORF. It bundles three ways to watch: antenna reception over DVB-T2, satellite and live streaming through the web and apps. Launched in 2013 as simpliTV, it was renamed simpli in October 2025 to put the streaming side front and centre. A genuinely free tier carries dozens of channels, most of them in HD, alongside paid plans that widen the lineup and add seven-day catch-up, the option to restart or pause live TV, and cloud recording. You can watch on the web, on iOS and Android, on Samsung and LG smart TVs, Apple TV and Fire TV. Picture quality tops out at HD and Full HD, with no 4K. The channels are licensed for Austria; EU rules let subscribers keep watching while travelling inside the Union, but from elsewhere you need a VPN connected to an Austrian server.
ATV was Austria’s first nationwide private television channel. It went on air in 2003 as ATVplus, took its current name in 2006, and belongs to ProSiebenSat.1 PULS 4. Around two fifths of the schedule is made in house, mostly Austrian reality and docu soap formats such as the flagship Bauer sucht Frau, Teenager werden Mütter and Pfusch am Bau. Around that sit the ATV Aktuell news, documentaries, US and German series and free TV movie premieres. The live stream and the catch up Mediathek run free and ad supported, exclusively through the Joyn platform, since ATV has no standalone app of its own. The stream is available only from inside Austria, and online quality tops out around 720p, with no 4K.
ATV2 is the second, complementary channel of Austria’s ATV, operated by ProSiebenSat.1 PULS 4. On air since December 2011, it has always worked as a sister service to its parent, leaning on reruns, scheduling that wraps around ATV’s reality lineup, and a steady supply of imported series and films aimed at a slightly younger crowd. Online you watch it free and ad supported, but only through the Joyn platform, since there is no standalone app and atv2.at simply forwards you into Joyn. The live stream and catch up are limited to Austria, so the signal is geo restricted, and picture quality tops out around HD rather than 4K or HDR.
krone.tv is the free Austrian news and general-interest channel run by Krone Multimedia, the company behind Vienna’s Kronen Zeitung newspaper. It started online back in 2016 and went on air as a proper linear channel in September 2020. There is no subscription: the service is free and paid for by advertising. You can follow the live channel and catch up on past shows through the Joyn platform and the krone.at video hub, with a handful of clips also free on YouTube. The line-up includes the midday bulletin Krone zu Mittag, the talk show Club 3, the political debate Das Duell, plus magazines and sport chat. It works on the web, iOS, Android, smart TVs, Apple TV and Fire TV, broadcasting in German at roughly HD quality. The catch: the full live channel and Joyn catch-up are geo-locked to Austria, and Joyn does not officially support VPNs, so from abroad you will want a VPN with an Austrian server to set your virtual location there.
ORF III is the public-service culture and information channel of Austria’s national broadcaster, on air since autumn 2011 on the frequency once held by TW1. It bills itself as the country’s largest cultural stage, mixing opera, theatre, concerts and cabaret with documentaries on contemporary history, science and Austrian cinema, plus discussion and news formats. You can stream it for free through ORF ON, though it is available only within Austria.
ORF KIDS is the free, ad-free children’s streaming service from Austria’s public broadcaster ORF, available at kids.orf.at. It launched on 1 January 2024 and got its own app the following October. There is a round-the-clock kids livestream alongside plenty on demand: original Austrian shows, cartoons, programmes about nature, knowledge and creativity, and a children’s news bulletin, ZIB KiDS, which is offered in sign language. It is aimed at roughly ages 3 to 14, in a safe, violence-free, age-rated and barrier-free space. Everything is free and you do not even need to log in, because the service is funded by the ORF household fee rather than advertising, so there are no ads at all. You can watch on the web, on dedicated iOS and Android apps, and through the ORF ON apps on Fire TV and on Samsung and LG smart TVs, in German at up to roughly Full HD. A few licensed titles are restricted to Austria while ORF’s own productions travel more widely, so from abroad you will want a VPN with an Austrian server to set your virtual location there.
ORF SPORT+ is Austria’s public-service sports channel, dedicated since 2011 to the disciplines that rarely make it onto the main schedule. Its live coverage spans volleyball, handball, judo, athletics, swimming, winter sports and Austria’s own domestic leagues. You can watch it free through ORF ON, though streaming is limited to viewers inside Austria.
PULS 24 is Austria’s free 24-hour news channel, run by the ProSiebenSat.1 PULS 4 group in Vienna and on air since 1 September 2019. It is funded by advertising and costs nothing to watch. The output is rolling news, politics and current affairs, with live event coverage and the talk shows Pro und Contra and Milborn, the latter hosted by news director Corinna Milborn. You follow the live stream and catch-up through the Joyn platform or the dedicated PULS 24 app for iOS, Android and Huawei, on the web and on smart TVs, in HD. The stream is geo-blocked to Austria and Joyn does not officially support VPNs, so viewers abroad need a VPN with an Austrian server that sets their virtual location. The channel itself remains free.
DAZN is a sports-first streaming service built to compete with traditional pay-TV sports channels. The schedule shifts dramatically from country to country: in Germany it carries the Bundesliga and Champions League matches, in Italy it owns the majority of Serie A, in Japan it runs baseball and boxing. The global side of DAZN remains its combat sports division, where it has become one of the biggest buyers of marquee boxing pay-per-view events.
Netflix didn’t invent streaming but it set the rules everyone else now plays by. With 325 million paying subscribers across 190 countries and a stable of shows like Squid Game, Stranger Things and Wednesday, it still defines what mainstream streaming looks like. Recent pushes into live sports and ad-supported plans show the company is willing to bend its own playbook when the market demands it.
Max is Warner Bros. Discovery’s attempt to keep everything important in one app: HBO’s prestige catalogue, the DC Universe, Warner Bros. theatrical slate and the reality-heavy Discovery library. The product still leans on HBO’s reputation for Sunday-night event TV (Succession, The Last of Us, House of the Dragon) but the expanded library means there is something for almost every household.
Apple TV+ takes the opposite approach to almost everyone else: no licensed back catalogue, only original productions. The result is a comparatively small library where misses are rare and hits like Ted Lasso, Severance, Slow Horses and For All Mankind have picked up Emmys. A single tier covers 4K HDR with Dolby Atmos, and the service is bundled into Apple One for households already invested in the Apple ecosystem.
Prime Video lives inside the wider Prime bundle, so streaming is only part of what you’re paying for. The content mix is unusual: splashy originals (The Boys, The Rings of Power, Reacher) sit next to a huge catalogue of movies available to rent or buy and a growing set of optional add-on Channels. Prime has also turned into a heavyweight in live sports, from Thursday Night Football to Champions League in select markets.
Paramount+ gathers the Paramount Pictures film vault, CBS prime-time drama, Nickelodeon kids programming and MTV reality into one subscription. The backbone is Taylor Sheridan’s growing slate of originals (the Yellowstone spin-offs 1923 and Lawman: Bass Reeves, plus Tulsa King), with Star Trek carrying the sci-fi side and South Park providing the decades-old evergreen. In select regions the service also carries NFL games and UEFA Champions League, blurring the line with traditional sports packages.
How the Austrian streaming market actually works
Austria runs a distinctive market: alongside the public ORF and the private ServusTV sit the German channels and the global giants. ORF ON and ServusTV deliver a lot of home-grown programming, while Netflix, Disney+, Prime Video and, since 2026, HBO Max compete on top.
The ORF fee, the free offer and the giants
The ORF fee, around 15.30 euros per household a month, funds the ORF and its ORF ON streaming service. Around it, ServusTV is free, the German commercial channels run through Joyn and RTL+’s free tier, FAST services like Pluto TV add more, and the paid platforms layer prestige drama and originals on top.
Why sport is the expensive part
Live sport is where Austrian streaming gets fragmented and pricey. The ADMIRAL Bundesliga is on Sky via Sky X and WOW, ORF shows four matches live, and ServusTV and ORF share skiing and Formula 1. The Champions League currently sits with Sky and Canal+. Following one competition can mean more than one subscription.
When a VPN helps from inside Austria
Even at home a VPN has uses. Catalogues differ by country, so connecting to a server elsewhere can surface films and series the Austrian library does not license, and the encryption is worth having on public Wi-Fi. That is a different job from travel, where the point is keeping your Austrian apps working once you leave the country.
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Streaming in Austria: FAQ
Everything you need to know about geo-blocks, VPNs and borderless streaming.