Bundling internet with TV (and sometimes phone) can lower your combined bill — but only if you'd actually use the TV side. With streaming everywhere, it's worth running the numbers before you sign up.
When Bundles Make Sense
If you want live TV, local channels, and sports, a bundle can be cheaper than buying internet and TV separately, and gives you a single bill. Promotional bundle pricing can be genuinely attractive in the first year.
When to Skip the Bundle
If you mostly stream, a TV package you barely watch is wasted money. Many people save more with a standalone internet plan plus one or two streaming services than with a full bundle.
Compare internet and TV bundle deals in your area:
See Bundle DealsWatch the Fine Print
- Post-promo price — bundle rates often jump after 12–24 months.
- Contract length and early-termination fees.
- Equipment and broadcast fees that aren't in the headline price.
- Channel line-up — make sure it includes what you actually watch.
Do the Math
Add up the true monthly cost of a bundle (after promos and fees) and compare it with standalone internet plus your streaming subscriptions. Pick whichever genuinely costs less for what you'll use.