TV Licence for Xbox, PlayStation, and Games Console
Gaming and on-demand streaming via your console: no licence needed. BBC iPlayer or live TV apps via the console: licence required. The console itself never triggers the rule.
Games only
£0
no licence
Console + Netflix
£0
on-demand only
Console + iPlayer
£180
licence required
The console is not the issue
A games console is not, in itself, a television receiver in the sense the TV licensing legislation cares about. The Xbox, PlayStation, and Nintendo Switch do not include broadcast TV tuners, so they cannot receive live broadcast TV directly. The console becomes a TV-licence-relevant device only when it is used to access a live broadcast TV service (a streaming app like BBC iPlayer, Now TV Live, Sky Sports, or any live-channel platform).
This makes gaming-only households a particularly clean licence-free case. A household whose only TV-connected device is a games console, and which uses that console only for games and on-demand streaming, has a strong licence-free position. The console plus a streaming subscription (Netflix, Disney+, etc.) is still licence-free because the streaming is on-demand. The licence requirement kicks in only when a live TV or iPlayer app is opened.
What you can do with a console and not need a licence
No licence needed
- • Playing games (single-player, multiplayer, online)
- • Cloud gaming (Xbox Cloud Gaming, PS+ streaming)
- • Netflix, Disney+, Amazon Prime Video
- • Apple TV+, Paramount+, Discovery+
- • YouTube uploaded videos and creator live streams
- • Twitch creator live streams
- • Blu-Ray and DVD playback
- • Spotify and music streaming apps
- • Media casting from your phone
- • Console software updates and downloads
Licence required
- • BBC iPlayer (any content)
- • Live Sky Sports app channels
- • Now TV Live TV pass live channels
- • Live Amazon Prime sports broadcasts
- • Live Premier League / Champions League streams
- • DAZN live broadcasts (regulated as TV)
- • Live BBC News on YouTube via the console
- • Live Sky News on YouTube via the console
Console apps that need careful attention
Several streaming apps available on consoles combine on-demand and live content. The licence position depends on what you actually watch within the app:
Amazon Prime Video
Most of Amazon Prime is on-demand and licence-free. The exception is live sports broadcasts (e.g. some Premier League matches on Wednesday nights, NFL games), which require a licence because they are live broadcast TV. If you only watch on-demand content on Prime Video, you do not need a licence.
Now TV
Now TV is split between on-demand passes (Cinema, Entertainment) which are licence-free, and a Live TV pass which includes live broadcast channels and requires a licence. The pass you subscribe to determines your licence position.
YouTube
Uploaded videos and creator live streams are licence-free. Live broadcast TV channels simulcast on YouTube (BBC News, Sky News) require a licence. See our YouTube TV licence guide for the full breakdown.
Twitch
Individual creator streams are licence-free. Twitch does not currently simulcast broadcast TV channels in the UK in any significant volume, so in practice Twitch use is licence-free.
Console + cloud gaming as a streaming alternative
Cloud gaming services have grown rapidly in recent years and add another licence-free category to console use. Xbox Cloud Gaming (included with Xbox Game Pass Ultimate), PlayStation Plus Premium's game-streaming tier, GeForce Now (Nvidia), Amazon Luna, and Google's Stadia-successor (where available) all deliver interactive game streaming over the internet.
None of these services involve live broadcast TV reception. They are interactive gaming, not broadcast viewing. They do not require a TV licence regardless of the device you use to access them: console, smart TV with built-in cloud gaming app, phone, laptop, or browser-based access. A household whose only TV use is cloud gaming has a clean licence-free position.
Declaring no licence needed
A gaming-only household can declare no licence needed and stop most TV Licensing enforcement letters. The declaration confirms that you do not watch live TV and do not use BBC iPlayer. Submit it via tvlicensing.co.uk/no-licence-needed, by phone on 0300 790 6165, or by post on a form supplied by TV Licensing.
The declaration is renewed every two years. Some households find the renewal-and-letter cycle irritating; the alternative is to ignore the letters entirely, which is legally fine. See our no licence declaration guide for the full process.
Not legal advice
For your specific situation, check tvlicensing.co.uk or seek free advice from Citizens Advice.