Lol. TV Licence, get in the bin where you belong. You outdated piece of poo.
Virgin try and up ours every year, but my wife phones up to say we’re going to move provider and it usually stays the same. I think we pay £40 for phone, tv and 100Mbs fibre.The ability of my Virgin Media subscription to constantly creep up towards £100 a month is an infinitely bigger irritation, considering there's almost naff-all left to strip out of it.
I suppose I'm too busy/lazy to look at alternatives![]()
TV licence seems least of your money worries! 🤪Eek, it's even more than I thought:
View attachment 11152
Well, this thread's prompted me into action again![]()
I pay a yearly Prime fee and I have live TV on it so I guess it does count towards a TV licence according to BBCAs far as I'm aware, Prime Video doesn't come with the additional 'Live' channels that require a TV license.
Prime Video is an on-demand subscription based viewing package, Prime Channels are additional channels that you can pay for which are simultaneously broadcast on satellite/cable.
I may be wrong, but it''s my understanding that the basic Prime Video subscription doesn't require a TV license..
https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/help/customer/display.html?nodeId=GJTCN933MAMGFZTF
Or just ask the clowns at work that still pay and watch itI doubt I could watch an episode long enough to find out, before wanting to throw myself under the nearest bus. Lol
I pay a yearly Prime fee and I have live TV on it so I guess it does count towards a TV licence according to BBC
I'm same there, too busy doing things I enjoy and put off phoning idiots up about broadband to deal with it, they add stuff on you never asked for to see if you notice, but with other costs going crazy it's time to start saving money where you canThe ability of my Virgin Media subscription to constantly creep up towards £100 a month is an infinitely bigger irritation, considering there's almost naff-all left to strip out of it.
I suppose I'm too busy/lazy to look at alternatives![]()
You don't need a licence for a mobile device, ie. has a battery and not plugged into the mains, so live TV on Sky Go on a tablet is fine but a desktop computer is not. Laptop/notebook probably exempt also.Im pretty sure the rules are that you only need a Licence if you watch or record Live TV broadcasts, you can have access to the channels via a subscription or whatever, but as long as you dont physically watch or record the live channels via any medium (TV, phone, tablet etc.) you dont need a Licence.
You don't need a licence for a mobile device, ie. has a battery and not plugged into the mains, so live TV on Sky Go on a tablet is fine but a desktop computer is not. Laptop/notebook probably exempt also.
Don't know the rules if you hook one of these up to a big screen that is plugged into the mains.
Madness really 🤪
Ha ha fair enough.Not sure where you have gotten that from but thats completely incorrect, you need a licence to watch or record Live TV on ANY device, it doesnt matter if it has a battery, portable generator or runs on magic.
Direct from the Site.
The law says you need to be covered by a TV Licence to:
On any device.
- watch or record TV on any channel - via any TV service (e.g. Sky, Virgin, BT, Freeview, Freesat)
- watch TV live on any streaming service (e.g. ITVX, Channel 4, YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, Now TV, Sky Go)
- watch BBC iPlayer*.
If you’re using a mobile device powered solely by its own internal batteries – like a smartphone, tablet or laptop – you will be covered by your home’s TV Licence, wherever you’re using it in the UK and Channel Islands.
However, if you’re away from home and plug one of these devices into the mains and use it to watch live on any channel, TV service or streaming service, or use BBC iPlayer*, you need to be covered by a separate TV Licence at that address (unless you’re in a vehicle or vessel like a train, car or boat).
I heard Chilijoncarne read out the exact same statement about not needing a licence if its not mains powered and thought that's a bit mental but he didn't say anymore or claim its okay, was just reading from somewhere, obviously it's been changed since or it wasn't clear previouslyNot sure where you have gotten that from but thats completely incorrect, you need a licence to watch or record Live TV on ANY device, it doesnt matter if it has a battery, portable generator or runs on magic.
Direct from the Site.
The law says you need to be covered by a TV Licence to:
On any device.
- watch or record TV on any channel - via any TV service (e.g. Sky, Virgin, BT, Freeview, Freesat)
- watch TV live on any streaming service (e.g. ITVX, Channel 4, YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, Now TV, Sky Go)
- watch BBC iPlayer*.
If you’re using a mobile device powered solely by its own internal batteries – like a smartphone, tablet or laptop – you will be covered by your home’s TV Licence, wherever you’re using it in the UK and Channel Islands.
However, if you’re away from home and plug one of these devices into the mains and use it to watch live on any channel, TV service or streaming service, or use BBC iPlayer*, you need to be covered by a separate TV Licence at that address (unless you’re in a vehicle or vessel like a train, car or boat).
who is checking these days if you dont pay your tv license and watch TV?