Streaming services in South Africa in 2026: What you pay, what you watch, and what really matters

Woman watching streaming services in South Africa on a smart TV while eating popcorn

 

  • Streaming isn’t a one-platform solution anymore.
  • Netflix: R49 - R199/month
  • Disney+: ±R139/month
  • Prime Video: ±R79/month
  • Apple TV+: ±R129/month
  • DStv Premium: ±R800+ per month
  • Viu: free or ±R69/month (Premium)
  • eVOD: free or ±R50/month (Premium)
  • People don’t replace services. They stack them.
  • Your fibre connection has more impact on your experience than the platform you choose.

 

PlatformPrice per monthLibrary sizeSimultaneous streams
Netflix R49 - R199 6,000 - 7,000 titles Up to 4
Amazon Prime Video +/- R79 8,000 - 9,000 titles Up to 3
Apple TV+ +/- R129 80+ films, 180+ films (Apple Originals), access to +100k rentals Up to 4
Disney+ +/- R139 1000+ films, 1,500+ series Up to 4
DStv Premium +/- R27- R800+ Local content, sports and live TV Up to 2
Viu Free or ±R69 (Premium) 10,000+ hours (mostly Asian content, limited local) 1-2
eVOD Free or ±R50 (Premium) 2,000+ hours (local-first content) 1

 

 

What are you really paying for?

The short answer is access. In South Africa, people are paying for access across streaming services, with plans ranging from roughly R45 a month for mobile entry tiers to about R229 for premium 4K options - and that is where things get expensive.

 

Most households don’t subscribe to one platform anymore. Instead, they stack them. One for the big-name series. One for the kids. One because it’s “only R79, so why not?”. Over time, that stack grows into a monthly bill that starts to rival a DStv subscription.

 

Industry data from Deloitte shows that subscription stacking is rising year on year. At the same time, local reporting from MyBroadband highlights that streaming now dominates household internet usage in South Africa.

 

In other words, we’re signing up for more services than ever and using a handful of them heavily, while the rest sit in the background “just in case” - even though some users save by rotating subscriptions and cancel the ones they’re not actively using.

 

 

Streaming services platform breakdown (what you get vs what it means)

Netflix

R49 - R199/month | ~6,167 to 7,057 titles | 4 streams

 

Netflix is still the place to go for unmissable series, and it remains the most popular choice for many south africans thanks to a huge library of over 5,400 movies and series. A large, constantly refreshed catalogue makes it the default for many households, and it continues to create original content rather than relying only on licensed titles. Plans range from a basic mobile option to premium 4K Ultra HD, with ad-free viewing and the option to download titles.

 

Amazon Prime Video

±R79/month | ~8,852 to 8,980 titles | 3 streams

 

A cheap option at around R79 per month, with one of the largest libraries available locally. On paper, it offers more than Netflix. In practice, discovery is the issue, and the TV offering is often stronger than the movies selection. There’s a lot to watch. Finding it is another story.

 

Still, at this price point, it delivers good value per Rand for multi-device households and is often the first “add-on” people keep.

 

Apple TV+

±R129/month | 80+ films, 180+ series (plus 100,000+ rentals) | 6 streams

 

A somewhat different model, Apple TV+ offers a smaller core library of Apple Originals. The interesting part is the add-on ecosystem. Through the Apple TV app, you can rent or buy from a massive catalogue.

 

With the option to literally only pay for the content you rent to watch, Apple TV+ could be the most affordable streaming option, if used smartly.

 

Disney+

±R139/month | 1,000+ films, 1,500+ series | 4 streams

 

Built around major franchises like Disney, Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars, and National Geographic. The catalogue isn’t just large - it’s familiar. That matters in households where people rewatch more than they explore. It also offers ad-free viewing and downloads, which makes it easy for parents. A go-to for family entertainment, especially if franchise content is what you want.

 

DStv Now

R27–R979/month | Up to 2 concurrent streams, setup dependent

 

Live sport is the main draw here, but there’s also on-demand viewing for people who want more than real-time events. That’s what keeps people subscribed.

 

If you’re not watching sport regularly, the value becomes somewhat harder to justify. If you are, there’s still no direct substitute at scale. DStv Stream is primarily focused on live sports, which reflects strong demand from sports fans in South Africa, while still offering a selection of catch-up viewing. If you don’t care about sport, free local options like SABC+ offer public broadcast channels and news without a monthly subscription fee.

 

Viu

Free or ±R69/month (Premium) | 10,000+ hours | 1–2 streams

 

Viu sits in a different lane. Crunchyroll is the leading anime streaming platform in South Africa, with a library of more than 1,000 titles. Its Fan Tier starts at R55 per month, while Mega Fan is R65 and adds perks like ad-free streaming and offline viewing. The catalogue leans heavily into Asian dramas, reality shows, and niche content that doesn’t always surface on global platforms.

 

For the right viewer, it’s high value. For everyone else, it’s supplementary.

 

Because there’s a free tier, it often enters the mix without replacing anything else. It just gets added, though Viu still has plenty to watch if you want Asian dramas rather than anime.

 

eVOD

Free or ±R50/month (Premium) | 2,000+ hours | 1 stream

 

eVOD is local-first, with free access to South African soap operas and dramas alongside a paid premium tier. Think soapies, reality, and South African originals. The kind of content people don’t necessarily search for, but regularly return to.

 

Viewers who want a broader local catalogue, including documentaries, often compare eVOD with Showmax, widely seen as the premier service for South African content and known for local true-crime titles.

 

The free tier lowers the barrier completely, which means it behaves less like a subscription decision and more like a default option sitting in the background, while Premium can still offer a low-cost upgrade.

 

 

A quick reality check on cost

Let’s say your household is running:

  • Netflix (4 streams possible)
  • Disney+ (4 streams possible)
  • Prime Video (3 streams possible)

 

That’s up to 11 simultaneous streams across various platforms.

 

Now ask yourself: can your internet handle that, especially when subscription tiers are split by SD, HD, or 4K quality and each plan may limit how many people can watch on one screen at a time?

 

Because streaming platforms assume:

  • Stable speeds
  • Multiple devices
  • No buffering under load

 

The number of screens a service allows only helps if your connection is reliable enough to support them.

 

And in South Africa, that’s not always the case.

 

 

Where most people get streaming wrong

Streaming quality depends on your internet first. Not the platform. People also use different platforms for different viewing needs, from local soapies and live African sport to global entertainment.

 

Most people think they’re making smart comparisons. They look at price, scroll through content libraries, maybe even weigh up which platform feels “worth it”. But a good service on paper can still fall apart on an unreliable connection.

 

But they’re comparing the services, not the thing that determines how those services perform: their connection.

 

In theory, a plan that allows four simultaneous streams sounds like enough. In practice, that number starts to shrink the moment real life kicks in. Two TVs running in different rooms. Add a couple of phones in the mix. Maybe someone downloading a file or updating an app in the background.

 

Suddenly, that “four-stream” plan doesn’t feel like four streams anymore - so then what’s the point of paying all that money every month?

 

The disconnect is that streaming platforms assume ideal conditions. Most households don’t have them.

 

The Independent Communications Authority of South Africa continues to highlight uneven broadband pricing and performance across the country. So even if two households pay for the same services, one streams in HD without interruption while the other buffers through peak hours, which shapes how people watch today.

 

 

Where Hippo comes in

Choosing between Netflix and Prime Video is easy. Understanding whether your connection can support them properly is not.

 

Hippo helps you:

 

Because the smartest streaming decision you can make right now isn’t choosing what to watch next. It’s making sure you can watch it properly when you do.

 

This article is for informational purposes only and should not be construed as financial, legal, or medical advice. Coverage terms, pricing, and availability may vary. Always review policy documents carefully and confirm current pricing with suppliers before making any decisions.


Compare Car Insurance Quotes



Our trusted partners


All our insurer partners are licenced Insurers and FSP’s