TL;DR — Quick Answer
It’s a tempting pitch. You’re shopping for internet, and one provider says, “Sign up and get Netflix, Max, or Hulu thrown in free.” For a lot of us, those subscriptions already eat up $40 or $50 a month, so getting them bundled feels like found money.
But here’s the thing — “free” and “included” can mean very different things depending on the provider. Some hand you the full streaming app with no strings. Others give you a watered-down ad version, or require you to also buy a cable TV package first. A few just give you a small discount and call it a perk.
So let’s cut through the marketing. Below, we’ll walk through exactly which internet providers include streaming in 2026, what you actually get, and — most importantly — whether the value holds up once you read the fine print.
First, How “Free Streaming” Actually Works
Before we get into specific providers, it helps to know the three ways streaming shows up in an internet deal. They are not the same, and the difference matters for your wallet.
The service is baked into your monthly bill. You don’t pay a penny more. T-Mobile’s All-In plan and Spectrum’s TV bundles work this way — though Spectrum makes you buy a TV plan to unlock it.
You still pay for streaming, just less than the normal price. Verizon’s $10 Netflix + Max bundle is a great example. It’s a real saving, but it’s not free.
Most bundled streaming is the cheapest, ad-supported version. If you currently pay for ad-free Netflix or Max, the “free” version is a downgrade — you’ll see commercials again.
Providers That Include Streaming in 2026
Here’s the lineup, sorted roughly from the most generous streaming perk to the most modest. Availability and pricing vary by address, so always confirm before you sign.
Spectrum
$50
/month internet · TV plan required for streamingWhen you pair Spectrum Internet with a Spectrum TV plan (Select Signature and up), you unlock 9 streaming apps at no extra cost — a package Spectrum values at $100+/mo.
- Included apps: Max (Basic w/ ads), Disney+, Hulu, ESPN Unlimited, Paramount+ Essential, Peacock Premium w/ ads, FOX One, AMC+ w/ ads, ViX Premium
- No streaming subscriptions to manage or pay separately
- Higher tiers add Tennis Channel and ad-free Max/Paramount+
- The catch: requires a Spectrum TV plan (~$100/mo) — internet-only gets nothing
- All apps are the ad-supported versions
Worth it only if you’d buy cable TV anyway
T-Mobile 5G Home Internet
$70
/month “All-In” plan (or $55 w/ a voice line)T-Mobile’s top home internet tier includes streaming with no separate bill — and locks your internet rate for 5 years.
- Included free: Hulu (with ads) + Paramount+ Essential — about $21/mo of value
- No cable TV plan needed to get it
- 5-year price guarantee on your internet rate
- Plug-and-play setup, no contract, no equipment fees
- Streaming is only on the pricier All-In tier, not the cheaper plans
- No Netflix or Max in the bundle
Genuinely included — good value if you watch Hulu
Verizon (Fios & 5G Home)
+$10
/month per streaming bundle add-onVerizon’s myHome perks let you bolt premium streaming onto Fios or 5G Home Internet for a flat $10 each — among the lowest prices anywhere.
- Netflix + Max (with ads) bundle for $10/mo — saves about $9
- Disney+, Hulu & ESPN+ bundle for $10/mo
- Add both bundles for $20/mo total
- Also: YouTube TV $10/mo off, Apple One discounts
- Not free — it’s a discounted add-on
- Bundles use ad-supported tiers
Real savings if you’d pay for Netflix or Max anyway
Xfinity (Comcast)
$15
/month StreamSaver · free Peacock optionEven internet-only Xfinity customers can grab cheap streaming bundles through the Xfinity Stream app — no cable box required.
- StreamSaver: Netflix, Max & Peacock (all w/ ads) bundled at a discount
- Build-your-own: Peacock + your pick of Netflix, Max, Disney+/Hulu, or Apple TV from $18/mo
- Peacock often included free for internet customers
- Bundles are discounted, not free
- Ad-supported tiers across the board
Handy if you want several apps on one bill
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Provider | What You Get | Real Cost | Ad-Free? | Catch |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spectrum | 9 apps incl. Max, Disney+, Hulu, Peacock | Internet + ~$100 TV plan | No (top tier adds some) | Must buy cable TV |
| T-Mobile | Hulu + Paramount+ | Included in $70 plan | No | Top tier only |
| Verizon | Netflix+Max or Disney bundle | +$10/mo each | No | Add-on, not free |
| Xfinity | Netflix, Max, Peacock, more | From $15–$35/mo | No | Discount, not free |
So… Is the Value Actually Real?
Here’s the honest answer: it depends entirely on what you’d be paying for anyway.
Streaming perks save you money in one situation — when the provider includes (or discounts) a service you were already going to subscribe to. If you’re a die-hard Hulu watcher and T-Mobile hands it to you free, that’s roughly $12 a month back in your pocket. That’s real.
But the math flips fast in two common cases:
1. You don’t actually use the app. A “free” Paramount+ subscription you open twice a year isn’t a saving — it’s a perk gathering dust. Providers count on this. The bundle sounds rich, but if you only watch one of the five apps, you’re valuing four of them at zero.
2. You already pay for the ad-free version. Almost every bundled app is the ad-supported tier. If you currently enjoy Netflix without commercials and the “free” perk is Netflix-with-ads, switching down isn’t a free upgrade — it’s a trade-off you might not want.
Spectrum’s nine free apps look unbeatable — but you only get them with a TV plan that costs around $100/mo. If you’re a cord-cutter who only wants internet, that “free $100 of streaming” actually costs you $100 in cable you didn’t want. For people who’d buy cable TV regardless, though, it’s one of the best deals out there.
What These Services Cost on Their Own (2026)
To judge any bundle, you need a baseline. Here’s roughly what the big apps charge in 2026 if you buy them solo. Prices crept up across the board this year, so a bundle can genuinely beat them — if you’d use the apps.
| Service | With Ads | Ad-Free |
|---|---|---|
| Netflix | ~$8/mo | ~$18/mo (Standard) |
| Max (HBO) | ~$11/mo | ~$18/mo |
| Hulu | ~$12/mo | ~$19/mo |
| Disney+ | ~$10/mo | ~$17/mo |
| Peacock | ~$11/mo | ~$17/mo |
| Paramount+ | ~$9/mo | ~$14/mo (w/ Showtime) |
Disney is folding the standalone Hulu app into Disney+ over the course of 2026. If a plan lists “Hulu,” your content will increasingly live inside the Disney+ app. It still works — just expect the branding to shift.
Who Should Chase a Streaming Bundle (and Who Shouldn’t)
Good fit if you…
You already pay for two or more streaming services, you don’t mind ads (or barely notice them), and you want fewer separate bills to track. In that case, Verizon’s $10 bundles or Xfinity’s StreamSaver can quietly trim $10–$20 off your monthly entertainment spend. Cable-TV households should look hard at Spectrum.
Skip it if you…
You’re a cord-cutter who only wants fast, cheap internet; you already pay for ad-free streaming and don’t want to go backward; or you only watch one specific service. In those cases, pick the best internet plan on price and reliability, and subscribe to your one app directly. Don’t let a streaming perk talk you into a pricier internet tier you don’t need.
Tips to Get the Most Out of Streaming Perks
Do the real math. Add up what you currently pay for streaming. If the bundle covers services on that list, subtract them — that’s your true saving. Ignore apps you wouldn’t otherwise buy.
Remember to activate. Bundled streaming almost never turns on automatically. You usually have to log in and link the app using your provider account. Plenty of people pay for a perk they never switched on.
Watch the promo clock. Some “free year of Max” style offers expire after 12 months and then start billing you. Set a calendar reminder before any intro period ends.
Check the tier. Confirm whether you’re getting ad-supported or ad-free. If you hate ads, ask what it costs to upgrade — sometimes you only pay the price difference.
Don’t overbuy internet for it. A streaming perk on a $90 plan you don’t need is more expensive than a $50 plan plus a $12 subscription. Run the numbers.
Streaming perks change often and vary by address. The fastest way to find out what’s actually available where you live — and whether the bundle beats subscribing on your own — is to call and compare. Dial 855-696-0156 to check current plans and offers in your area.
Frequently Asked Questions
Spectrum technically includes the most — nine apps including Max, Disney+, Hulu, and Peacock — but only when you add a Spectrum TV plan that costs around $100/mo. For streaming that’s truly included without a cable package, T-Mobile’s All-In 5G Home Internet plan bundles Hulu and Paramount+ at no extra charge.
Almost always the ad-supported version. Providers bundle the cheaper, ad-supported tiers of Netflix, Max, Hulu, and others. If you currently pay for an ad-free plan, the “free” perk is technically a step down. Most providers will let you upgrade to ad-free by paying only the price difference.
Yes, with some providers. T-Mobile includes Hulu and Paramount+ on its All-In plan without any TV package, and Xfinity often gives internet customers free Peacock plus cheap StreamSaver bundles. Spectrum is the big exception — its free apps require a Spectrum TV plan on top of internet.
Not free, but heavily discounted. Verizon’s myHome perks let Fios and 5G Home Internet customers add a Netflix + Max bundle (with ads) for about $10/mo, which saves roughly $9 versus subscribing separately. You can also add a Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+ bundle for another $10/mo.
It can be — but only for services you’d pay for anyway. If a bundle includes apps you actually watch, you’ll usually save $10–$20 a month versus buying them individually. If it includes apps you never open, that “value” is zero. Always compare the bundle price against what you currently spend.
Disney is gradually folding the standalone Hulu app into Disney+ throughout 2026. Your Hulu content isn’t going away — it’s moving inside the Disney+ app. If an internet plan advertises “Hulu,” you’ll increasingly access that content through Disney+ instead of a separate app.
Yes. Because these perks are tied to your internet (or TV) subscription, the streaming access ends when you cancel the plan. That’s worth keeping in mind — a bundle locks part of your entertainment to one provider, so switching internet later means losing those apps unless you re-subscribe directly.
Last updated June 2026. All prices, streaming bundles, and availability are subject to change and vary by location and provider. Streaming services are typically ad-supported tiers and may require separate activation. The Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) ended in June 2024 and is unrelated to these offers. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always verify current terms directly with the provider before signing up.


