Guides
How to Cancel Cable and Switch to Streaming — Step-by-Step Guide (2026)
The average American cable bill is $217/month including equipment fees and taxes. A fully equipped streaming setup costs $50–80/month. The math for switching is obvious — but the process of actually canceling cable and g
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The average American cable bill is $217/month including equipment fees and taxes. A fully equipped streaming setup costs $50–80/month. The math for switching is obvious — but the process of actually canceling cable and getting your new setup running is where most people stall.
This guide walks through every step: from mapping your channels before you call to returning the equipment after you're done. Eight steps, in order.
Step 1: Audit Your Current Cable Bill
Before you cancel, know exactly what you're paying for and what you'll miss.
Pull your most recent cable bill and note:
- Total monthly cost (including equipment, fees, and taxes)
- Contract status — are you in a promotional period with a contract end date?
- Equipment rental fees — cable box, modem, or DVR rentals inflate the bill
- Channels you actually watch — most cable subscribers use 10–15 channels regularly out of 200+
The channel audit is the most important part. Write down every channel your household watches regularly — including sports, news, and specialty channels. This list drives your streaming service selection in Step 5.
Step 2: Map Your Channels to Streaming Services
Now match your channel list to streaming alternatives:
| Channel | Streaming Option | Monthly Cost |
|---|---|---|
| ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox | OTA antenna | $0 (after $25–50 hardware) |
| ESPN, ESPN2 | Sling Orange / YouTube TV / Hulu Live | $40–90/mo |
| CNN, MSNBC, Fox News | Sling / YouTube TV / Hulu Live | Included in above |
| HGTV, Discovery, Lifetime | Philo | $25/mo |
| HBO | Max | $9.99–16.99/mo |
| Netflix | Netflix | $7.99–22.99/mo |
| AMC, Hallmark | Frndly TV | $8.99/mo |
Most households find that one live TV service (for sports and cable news) plus one or two on-demand services covers 90% of what they watched on cable — at less than half the cost.
Step 3: Check Your Early Termination Fee (ETF)
Before you call to cancel, check whether you're in a contract that has an early termination fee:
How to check:
- Log into your account online and look for "contract" or "agreement" details
- Call customer service and ask: "Am I currently in a contract? What is my contract end date?"
- Check your original signup paperwork
ETF amounts by provider (typical 2026 rates):
- Comcast (Xfinity): $10–$20 per month remaining on contract
- AT&T: Up to $15–20 per month remaining
- Spectrum: No contract required — no ETF
- Cox: Varies by package; check your agreement
Strategy: If you have 3 months left on a $15/month ETF contract, that's $45 to leave early. Weighed against $140–170/month in savings, it pays for itself in less than one month. Don't let a small ETF keep you stuck paying $200+ for another year.
Step 4: Verify Your Internet Speed
Without cable TV, your internet becomes more critical. Check that your current plan is adequate:
Minimum requirements:
- 25 Mbps — 1 HD stream
- 50 Mbps — 4K or 2 simultaneous HD streams
- 100+ Mbps — multiple devices streaming simultaneously
- 200+ Mbps — households mixing streaming, gaming, and remote work
Test your current speeds at fast.com or speedtest.net. If you're below 50 Mbps, consider upgrading your internet plan before canceling cable — or at the same time.
Important: When you cancel cable TV, you can keep your cable internet service separately. You don't have to leave your internet provider. Many households find their cable company's internet-only plan is actually cheaper than the bundled TV+internet package they were paying for.
Modem ownership: If you're renting a modem from your cable company (~$10–15/month), buying your own modem ($60–100 one-time) saves money immediately after switching to internet-only.
Step 5: Choose Your Streaming Services
Based on your channel audit from Steps 1–2, choose your new stack:
For sports fans who need ESPN and cable channels:
- Sling TV Orange ($40/mo) + antenna ($25–50 one-time) = ~$40/month ongoing
- YouTube TV ($82.99/mo) = full replacement, no antenna needed
For entertainment-focused households (no sports):
- Philo ($25/mo) + antenna = ~$25/month ongoing
- Add Netflix ($7.99–15.49/mo) for on-demand originals
For everything:
- YouTube TV ($82.99/mo) + Netflix ($15.49/mo) = $98.48/month — still $118/month less than average cable
Always include free services:
- Tubi — 50,000+ titles, completely free
- Pluto TV — 250+ live channels, free
- These replace a surprising amount of casual viewing at zero cost
Sling TV
From $40/mo
ESPN + cable channels from $40/mo — best value for sports cord-cutters
Step 6: Get Your Streaming Device
You need a streaming device to run your new apps. You may already have one — if your TV was made after 2020, it likely has built-in apps. But for live TV reliability, a dedicated stick is better.
Best options:
- Roku Streaming Stick 4K ($49.99) — best all-around, neutral platform
- Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K Max ($59.99) — best for Prime members
- Fire TV Stick Lite ($29.99) — best budget option
Set up your device and install your chosen streaming apps before you cancel cable. Do a dry run for a week or two if you want — most streaming services offer free trials. This way, you know your setup works before you make the call.
See our best streaming device for cord cutting guide (/articles/best-streaming-device-for-cord-cutting-2026) for full recommendations.
Step 7: Cancel Your Cable
Now make the call. Cable companies train retention specialists specifically to keep you from leaving — be prepared.
What to expect:
- You'll likely be transferred to a retention department
- They will offer you a lower promotional rate (typical: $30–50/month discount for 12 months with a new contract)
- They may ask why you're leaving — "I found a better option at a lower price" is sufficient
- They will try multiple times before processing the cancellation
What to say:
- "I'd like to cancel my cable TV service"
- If offered a deal: "I appreciate that, but I've already made arrangements. I'd like to proceed with cancellation"
- Ask for: "What is my service end date? What equipment do I need to return?"
Alternative to calling: Some providers (Comcast/Xfinity) now allow cancellation through their website or chat — check before calling if you prefer to avoid the retention pitch.
After the call: Get a confirmation number and written confirmation of your cancellation and service end date. This protects you if billing issues arise.
Step 8: Return Your Equipment
Most cable providers require equipment return within 30 days of cancellation to avoid being charged for it.
Typical equipment to return:
- Cable box / set-top box
- Remote controls (included with the box)
- Cable modem (if you rented it — not applicable if you own your own)
- CableCARDs (if applicable)
How to return:
- In-store drop-off: Fastest and simplest — get a receipt
- UPS drop-off: Most providers have arrangements with UPS for free equipment return; they print the label for you — get a tracking number
- Scheduled pickup: Some providers offer this
Always get a receipt or tracking confirmation. Unreturned equipment charges ($100–200 per box) are one of the most common billing disputes after cancellation.
The Full Savings Picture
| Cable | Streaming | |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly cost | ~$217 | ~$50–80 |
| Equipment fees | ~$15–25 (included above) | $0 ongoing |
| Contract | Often required | Month-to-month |
| **Annual cost** | **~$2,604** | **~$600–960** |
| **Annual savings** | **~$1,644–$2,004** |
Over five years: $8,220–$10,020 saved.
The one-time hardware cost (streaming device + antenna) runs $50–100. It pays for itself within the first month.
For the full picture of what streaming services to choose after canceling, see our best streaming services 2026 roundup (/best-streaming-services-2026), cheapest way to watch live TV without cable (/articles/cheapest-way-to-watch-live-tv-without-cable-2026), and YouTube TV vs Hulu + Live TV comparison (/articles/youtube-tv-vs-hulu-live-tv).