Walk into any UK living room where the satellite dish came down two years ago and there is a fair chance the household is paying NOW for at least one channel pack. Sky's contract-free sister service has quietly become the default way British viewers rent Sky Atlantic, Sky Cinema or a single weekend of football without signing eighteen months of their life away. NOW gets praised for that flexibility. It also gets a steady drip of complaints about ads on the entry tier, the absence of true 4K on most content, and Sports passes that look cheap until you actually count up a season. This review pulls apart what NOW genuinely is in 2026, what each membership costs, where Boost earns its £6, and where the maths starts working against you compared with a Sky Stream box.
What NOW actually is in 2026 #
NOW is Sky's streaming-only, no-contract platform. It runs on the same content library Sky distributes through its dish and Sky Stream box, but the delivery is purely over your home broadband and the commitment is monthly — cancel any time, no early-termination fee, no engineer visit. The service dropped "TV" from the brand a while back and is now simply NOW, with four parallel Memberships you can mix and match: Entertainment, Cinema, Sports and Hayu. Each membership is its own subscription, billed separately, and each can be paused or cancelled inside the account dashboard without phone calls.
What you do not get is the satellite-style EPG with hundreds of linear channels stitched together. NOW gives you a curated app experience where live channels (Sky Atlantic, Sky Max, Sky Cinema's tiered channels and the Sky Sports family) sit alongside on-demand box sets. Recording in the traditional sense does not exist; the service relies on catch-up windows and on-demand availability. Some live events are time-limited and do not stay on-demand forever, which is a fact more new subscribers learn the hard way during a Sky Atlantic finale week.
NOW Membership tiers explained #
Pricing on NOW shifts more than most British streaming services because Sky frequently dangles introductory offers. As of writing, the headline rates a UK household sees on now.com sit roughly as follows — and these figures are subject to change at now.com without notice. Entertainment Membership is around £9.99 a month and gives you Sky Atlantic, Sky Max, Sky Comedy, Alibi, MTV and the on-demand box-set library — Succession, House of the Dragon, The White Lotus, the full Sky-original slate.
Cinema Membership is roughly £9.99 a month for Sky Cinema's eleven dedicated channels, premieres of new theatrical releases (typically a fresh blockbuster every Friday) and a deep on-demand back catalogue. Sports Membership is the priciest at around £34.99 a month for the rolling subscription, covering the full Sky Sports lineup — Premier League, F1, EFL, cricket and golf where Sky holds the rights. Hayu Membership is the cheap-and-cheerful entry, around £4.99 a month, for the Real Housewives, Below Deck and the rest of the NBCUniversal reality stack.
Stack all four and you are at roughly £60 a month. That is before Boost is added. The arithmetic is the first reason households reconsider whether NOW is actually saving them money compared with a flat Sky bundle.
Boost — what it does and whether it is worth £6 #
Boost is NOW's optional add-on that does three things. It removes the advertising breaks on Entertainment and Cinema (Sports does not carry ads on the tier itself, the games speak for themselves). It steps the picture quality up to 1080p Full HD where the source supports it, instead of the 720p ceiling on the standard tier. And it adds 5.1 surround sound on titles where the audio track is encoded for it, which matters more than people expect on the Sky Atlantic dramas mixed for cinema-style sound.
Boost costs around £6 a month on top of whichever Memberships you hold. It applies across the account, so paying once boosts every Membership simultaneously. For a single Cinema subscriber who watches one or two films a week, the ad-free upgrade alone justifies the spend. For a Sports-only household that already has no ads, Boost is mostly buying you 1080p — useful on a 55-inch panel, less obviously valuable on a phone or tablet.
Where Boost falls short is 4K. NOW does not deliver 4K HDR on its general catalogue even with Boost active. A handful of live Sky Sports fixtures have been trialled in 4K through NOW, but the bulk of Cinema premieres and Sky Atlantic dramas top out at 1080p. If your motivation for paying Sky is to watch House of the Dragon in genuine UHD, NOW is not the right product — Sky Stream or Sky Q are.
NOW Sports day, week and month pass maths #
The Sports Day Pass is one of NOW's most-clicked products, especially on derby weekends. It costs around £14.99 and gives you 24 hours of full Sky Sports access. The Week Pass sits at roughly £19.99 — striking value if a Champions League midweek and a Premier League weekend land back-to-back. Then there is the standard Monthly Membership at around £34.99.
Where it gets uncomfortable is when day-pass habits accumulate. A football fan picking up four day passes a month — say two big Premier League weekends and two midweek matches — spends roughly £60. That is nearly double the monthly rolling subscription. NOW's interface does not nag you about this, and many casual subscribers only realise after looking at three months of card statements. The honest rule of thumb: if you watch sport on more than two separate days in any given month, the Monthly Membership beats day passes outright.
NOW vs Sky Stream — the £ comparison #
Sky Stream is Sky's puck-style streaming box that delivers the full Sky experience over broadband, with no dish required, on an 18-month or rolling contract depending on the deal. Where NOW is a per-Membership marketplace, Sky Stream is a bundled package. The most directly comparable Sky Stream tier — Entertainment plus Cinema with Netflix Standard included — typically lands around £43 a month on an 18-month commitment. NOW Entertainment plus NOW Cinema plus Boost lands roughly £25.97 a month with no contract, but you do not get Netflix bundled and you do not get the Stream Box's polished EPG, voice search, watchlist sync across the household and integrated Netflix/Disney+ panels.
Add Sky Sports to the Sky Stream comparison and the maths flips again — Sky Stream's full sports bundle on a long contract often beats NOW Sports' rolling £34.99. Households who genuinely watch Sports every week tend to migrate to Sky Stream for the better unit economics, while NOW keeps the customers who only want sport in concentrated bursts (the Six Nations, a Test cricket summer, an F1 season-decider weekend).
Picture quality and the ads tier #
Without Boost, NOW caps at 720p HD with stereo audio and runs ad breaks on Entertainment and Cinema. The ads are not lengthy by free-broadcaster standards but they punctuate films and on-demand episodes, and viewers used to traditional Sky on a dish find this jarring. The 720p ceiling is most visible on televisions over 50 inches; on a smaller panel or laptop the difference from 1080p is harder to spot in motion. Sky Sports streams have generally been higher quality than the on-demand Cinema content, with stable HD bitrates on a decent fibre connection.
Buffering complaints, when they appear, almost always trace back to either the household broadband or peak-time congestion on routes. NOW recommends roughly 25 Mbps for HD, more for Boost, and falls back gracefully on slower lines — but the fallback is the 720p stream with visible compression on football crowds and grass.
Which devices NOW works on #
NOW runs on most modern smart TV platforms — LG webOS, Samsung Tizen, recent Sony Bravia models, Hisense VIDAA, Toshiba and Bush sets — plus Roku, Amazon Fire TV, Apple TV, Chromecast with Google TV and Google TV-branded sets. On consoles, the PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X/S apps work. Mobile is covered by iOS and Android with offline downloads on Boost.
What NOW does not run on cleanly is older smart TVs (anything pre-2017 is patchy), the original Now TV stick (which Sky has been winding down), and certain projector firmware combos. There is also no native NOW app for some European Android TV builds shipped on imported hardware. If you are on a 2014-era Samsung, the most reliable fix is a £20 Fire TV Stick rather than fighting the built-in app.
What NOW does well #
The strongest argument for NOW is genuine flexibility. You can subscribe in May, watch the Sky Atlantic finale you cared about, and cancel before the next billing cycle without an engineer call or contract penalty. The Hayu add-on at under £5 is the cheapest legitimate way to access the entire NBCUniversal reality library in the UK. The mobile downloads on Boost work cleanly for a tube commute. The Sky-original drama catalogue — the genuine reason to pay — is identical to what Sky Q subscribers see, so no compromises on the actual content library.
Customer service through the NOW chat is generally responsive on billing queries, and the cancel-and-resubscribe loop has fewer dark patterns than several rival streaming services that hide the cancellation flow.
Where NOW lets you down #
No 4K on most content, even with Boost. No proper recording — only on-demand windows. Day-pass economics that punish casual habits if you do not stay disciplined. Ads on the cheaper tier that feel out of place when you are paying a tenner a month. A device support story that quietly drops older smart TVs without much warning. And on the Sports side, certain niche content (some EFL fixtures, certain cup competitions) sits with TNT Sports rather than Sky, so a NOW Sports subscriber still does not get every football match in England.
There is also the question of price drift. Sky has nudged NOW prices upward several times in recent years, and Boost has crept from a £3 add-on to £6 over the same period. The contract-free flexibility is real, but the per-month cost of a fully-featured NOW stack is now within touching distance of a Sky Stream bundle that includes Netflix.
Who NOW is right for #
NOW makes most sense for three groups. Tenants and houseshares who cannot install a dish or do not control the broadband long-term. Sport fans whose viewing is concentrated in seasons (rugby internationals, Test summer, F1 finale) rather than spread evenly across the year. And households who already pay for Netflix and Disney+ separately and just want a no-strings way to see the latest Sky Atlantic series without bundling anything else.
It makes least sense for heavy weekly sports viewers (Sky Stream beats it on price), households that genuinely want 4K HDR drama (Sky Stream or buying digital from Apple TV beats it on quality), and anyone who values a single integrated EPG over a marketplace of separate apps and Memberships.
Is NOW TV cheaper than Sky? #
It depends on what you watch. Stack Entertainment, Cinema and Sports on NOW with Boost and you land near £66 a month — within a few pounds of a comparable Sky Stream bundle that often includes Netflix. NOW wins on flexibility (no contract, monthly cancellation) but loses the bundling discount Sky offers across a long commitment. For light, seasonal viewers NOW saves money; for heavy weekly Sky watchers, Sky Stream is usually the cheaper option per hour viewed.
Do I need a TV Licence with NOW? #
Yes, if you are watching live channels on NOW (any of the live Sky Atlantic, Sky Max, Sky Sports streams) or watching BBC iPlayer in any form, you need a current UK TV Licence regardless of the device. The TV Licence rule covers live broadcast viewing and BBC catch-up; it is not waived because the signal arrives over broadband. Watching only on-demand non-BBC content on NOW does not by itself require a Licence, but in practice almost every NOW household watches something live and needs one.
Can I download NOW shows offline? #
Offline downloads on NOW are gated behind Boost. With Boost active, the NOW iOS and Android apps let you download episodes and films to watch without a connection — useful for trains, flights and patchy hotel Wi-Fi. Downloads expire after a fixed window and the catalogue available for download is narrower than what streams. Without Boost, you cannot download anything and must stream live, which is the practical reason many subscribers eventually add the £6.
Why does NOW have ads? #
Ads exist on NOW Entertainment and Cinema's standard tier because the cheaper price point is funded partly by advertising, mirroring the ad-supported tiers Netflix and Disney+ have rolled out. To remove ads you add Boost, which lifts the Entertainment and Cinema streams to ad-free 1080p with 5.1 audio. NOW Sports does not carry traditional ad breaks within events, though pre-roll and break promos still appear during natural game stoppages.
Is NOW available on every smart TV? #
Not quite. NOW supports recent LG, Samsung, Sony, Hisense, Toshiba and Bush smart TVs, plus Roku, Apple TV, Fire TV, Chromecast with Google TV, and PlayStation/Xbox. Older sets — typically pre-2017 — are increasingly dropped from app updates, and certain niche or imported smart TV platforms never had a native app. The pragmatic workaround for an unsupported TV is a Fire TV Stick or Roku Express, both of which run NOW reliably for a one-off £20 to £40.
This review reflects the author's interpretation of publicly available information about NOW Memberships and pricing as of writing; tiers, features and prices can change at any time on now.com.

































