German streaming platforms
In Germany the basics are covered by the licence fee. See what is worth adding on top and what needs a VPN.
The smart way to pay for streaming in Germany
Start from what you already pay for. Through the licence fee (Rundfunkbeitrag), the ARD Mediathek and ZDF carry a huge amount of films, series and documentaries, mostly ad-free and in HD, so the real question is what to add on top. 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
- Public-service TV, already paid for: the ARD Mediathek, ZDF and ARTE carry films, series, documentaries and live TV through the licence fee at no extra cost.
- Box sets and prestige drama: Netflix and HBO Max, which launched in Germany in January 2026, cover most of it, with some ongoing HBO series staying on Sky and WOW.
- Families: Disney+ for Marvel, Pixar and Star Wars, and Prime Video if you already pay for Amazon delivery.
- Football and sport: DAZN and Sky via WOW split the Bundesliga, DAZN and Prime Video share the Champions League, and Dyn covers handball, basketball and volleyball.
- 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, MUBI for cinema and Crunchyroll for anime.
Where the savings actually hide
Two habits cut the bill more than any deal. Lean on the public Mediatheken first, since ARD and ZDF already fill most evenings through the fee you pay anyway. 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.
ARD Mediathek is the shared streaming and catch-up portal of Germany’s public broadcasting federation ARD, which is made up of nine regional broadcasters (Bayerischer Rundfunk, WDR, NDR, MDR and others). The app carries the live stream of Das Erste, the children’s channel KiKA, culture-focused 3sat and news network tagesschau24, with no ads and no subscription fee. The whole service is funded by the German broadcasting licence (Rundfunkbeitrag) and, as a result, geographically restricted to Germany.
Dyn Media is the Germany-based sports streaming service that went live in August 2023 with a simple thesis: give the disciplines that football pushes to the margins (handball, basketball, volleyball, table tennis, field hockey and women’s sport) a proper broadcasting home. The schedule spans the LIQUI MOLY HBL, 2. Handball-Bundesliga, the Basketball-Bundesliga (BBL), VBL volleyball, table tennis and field hockey, all with in-house commentary and full-length studio shows around each game.
waipu.tv is the independent IPTV service run by Exaring, live since 2016 and positioned as the main alternative to Deutsche Telekom’s MagentaTV. Over any ordinary broadband connection subscribers get more than 200 channels in HD (and, on selected streams, 4K), a shared on-demand library and cloud DVR storage of up to a hundred hours. Four tiers are offered: a free waipu.tv Free plan, Start, Comfort and Perfect Plus at the top, which unlocks the largest recording quota. Billing is tied to a German address.
ZDFmediathek is the streaming and archive portal of Germany’s second public broadcaster, ZDF, which has been on air since 1963. The library pulls together live ZDF, the heute news bulletins, the Terra X documentary strand, culture from 3sat, children’s programming via KiKA and the broadcaster’s own fiction output (the long-running crime slots and the so-called Herzkino romance films). Everything is ad-free and funded by the German broadcasting licence, and the content is locked to German IP addresses.
Joyn is run by ProSiebenSat.1 and positions itself as a hybrid between free TV and on-demand. The ad-supported free tier bundles live streams from more than 150 channels (ProSieben, Sat.1, Kabel eins plus partner networks like DMAX or Welt) with catch-up for what has just aired. Joyn+ layers paid content on top: an ad-free viewing mode, selected pay-TV channels in HD, exclusive scripted originals and coverage of European football tournaments. Availability is limited to Germany and Austria.
ARTE is the Franco-German public cultural broadcaster, on air since 1992 and run by ARTE GEIE, a European Economic Interest Group headquartered in Strasbourg. The arte.tv platform streams documentaries, arthouse cinema, classical and contemporary concerts, stage recordings and in-depth European current affairs, all without ads and free of charge. Most programmes ship with subtitles in English, German, French, Spanish, Polish or Italian.
Sky Deutschland was created in 2009 through the rebrand of Premiere and, after years under Comcast, is in 2026 moving to Bertelsmann’s RTL Group following regulatory clearance of the deal. The offering splits into the traditional satellite and cable packages sold under Sky Q and a streaming-only alternative called WOW, billed month-to-month with no long-term commitment. The headline draws are the exclusive Bundesliga and the complete Formula 1 — though since HBO Max launched, only select former HBO shows remain on Sky rather than the full catalogue. WOW streaming is available in Germany and Austria, while the satellite and cable Sky Q packages also reach Switzerland.
MagentaTV is Deutsche Telekom’s IPTV service, launched in 2017 as a replacement for the older Entertain TV. Subscribers get more than 180 German and international channels in HD and 4K, an in-house on-demand library called Megathek with productions from MegaNow and ARD Degeto, and the option to fold Netflix, Disney+ or RTL+ into a single Telekom bill. The Flex, Smart and MegaStream tiers differ in channel count, 4K availability and whether a dedicated set-top box is required.
ProSieben is the Germany-facing commercial channel of ProSiebenSat.1 Media SE, on air since 1989 and aimed at a younger, family audience. The grid is built from imported US drama and comedy (typically dubbed in German), long-running entertainment shows like Joko & Klaas Live or The Masked Singer Germany, and the Galileo and TV total strands. The live stream and catch-up sit on the free Joyn platform.
RTL+ is the streaming platform of Bertelsmann-owned RTL Deutschland, launched back in 2007 as RTL Now before going through two rebrands (TVNow, then RTL+ in late 2021). On top of the expected TV catalogue (reality formats like Deutschland sucht den Superstar, daily soaps, plus Formula 1 and, in some seasons, NFL coverage) the service bundles a music library powered by Deezer and an audiobook catalogue. The lineup runs from entry-level Basic through Premium and the ad-free Premium Werbefrei up to RTL+ Musik, which adds the music and audiobook catalogue, while the Family tier opens up more profiles. They differ in simultaneous streams, picture quality and music access.
SAT.1 is a national German commercial broadcaster that made history when it launched on 1 January 1984 as PKS, becoming the country’s first privately owned television station. It sits within ProSiebenSat.1 Media SE, which has been majority-controlled by Italy’s MFE-MediaForEurope, the Berlusconi family’s group, since September 2025. The channel courts an older, family-minded audience with its Frühstücksfernsehen breakfast show, crime dramas such as Der letzte Bulle and homegrown entertainment. Live and catch-up streaming is free via sat1.de and Joyn.
Play SRF is the streaming and catch-up portal of Swiss public broadcaster SRF, part of the SRG SSR group and aimed at the German-speaking part of Switzerland. Viewers get live feeds of SRF 1, SRF zwei and SRF info, the Tagesschau news bulletins, the political debate show Arena, Swiss-made drama like Tschugger and Neumatt, and full coverage of the Alpine Ski World Cup. The service is funded through the Serafe licence fee and geo-restricted to Switzerland.
WOW is the Sky Group’s streaming alternative to the traditional Sky Deutschland satellite bundle, marketed on a month-to-month basis with no contract lock-in. Launched in June 2022 to replace Sky Ticket, it splits the catalogue into three passes: Filme & Serien (HBO Max titles, Sky Cinema premieres), Live-Sport (Bundesliga, Premier League, Formula 1 and parts of UEFA) and an optional Premium add-on. Premium does not unlock 4K or Dolby Atmos; the maximum quality stays at Full HD 1080p with Dolby Digital 5.1 surround; but it removes ads and allows two simultaneous streams. Available in Germany only.
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.
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.
Disney+ is the one place where Disney, Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars and National Geographic sit alongside the general-entertainment hub Star. It launched globally in November 2019 and reached the Czech Republic in June 2022. Most markets now offer three tiers: an ad-supported entry plan plus the ad-free Standard (Full HD) and Premium (4K HDR with Dolby Atmos), while a few countries such as the Czech Republic keep only the two ad-free plans. Annual billing trims roughly two months off the yearly cost.
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.
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 German streaming market actually works
Germany runs an unusual market: a strong, fee-funded public-service layer sits underneath the global giants. The ARD Mediathek, ZDF and ARTE give away a huge amount of quality programming, while Netflix, Disney+, Prime Video and, since 2026, HBO Max compete on top.
The fee, the free tier and the giants
The licence fee (Rundfunkbeitrag), around 18.36 euros per household a month, funds ARD and ZDF and keeps their Mediatheken largely ad-free. Around them, the commercial channels are free with ads 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 German streaming gets fragmented and pricey. The Bundesliga is split between DAZN and Sky via WOW, the Champions League between DAZN and Prime Video, while SAT.1 shows selected matches and ARD’s Sportschau the highlights for free. Following one competition can mean more than one subscription.
When a VPN helps from inside Germany
Even at home a VPN has uses. Catalogues differ by country, so connecting to a server elsewhere can surface films and series the German 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 German apps working once you leave the country.
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Streaming in Germany: FAQ
Everything you need to know about geo-blocks, VPNs and borderless streaming.