Best HDMI Splitter for Streaming on Multiple TVs in 2026
Want to run one streaming device on two TVs? HDMI splitters can do it, but there are important limitations. Here's what to buy and what to know before you set it up.
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An HDMI splitter sends the same signal from one streaming device to two (or more) TVs simultaneously. It's a simple solution for specific use cases — but it has limitations that most buyers don't realize until they've already purchased.
Here's what works, what doesn't, and the best options for streaming households.
What an HDMI Splitter Actually Does
An HDMI splitter takes one HDMI input and duplicates it to multiple HDMI outputs. Both TVs show the exact same picture at the exact same time — there's no independent control. If you pause on TV 1, it pauses on TV 2.
Where this works well:
- Sports bars or waiting rooms showing the same content on multiple screens
- Two TVs in the same room (master bedroom + bathroom, kitchen counter + kitchen TV)
- Fitness setups where the same workout video plays in multiple places
- Commercial displays or signage
Where it doesn't work:
- Two people in different rooms who want to watch different things
- Any situation where the two viewers want independent control
- Streaming services with DRM that detect and block splitting (see below)
DRM Warning: Streaming Services May Block Splitters
This is the most important section.
Most major streaming services use HDCP (High-bandwidth Digital Content Protection), a copy protection standard built into HDMI. HDCP requires that every display in the chain is an HDCP-compliant display.
Many HDMI splitters do not pass HDCP correctly. When a streaming service detects a non-compliant device in the chain, it:
- Downgrades the output to a lower resolution (480p or 720p)
- Displays an HDCP error ("HDCP Error — Cannot display this content")
- Blocks the stream entirely
HDCP-compliant splitters solve this by negotiating HDCP correctly with the source device and both output TVs. They're more expensive (generally $30+) but they're the only splitters that reliably work with Netflix, Disney+, and other HDCP-protected content.
Best HDMI Splitters for Streaming
Active vs. Passive HDMI Splitters
Passive splitters ($5-15): Just wire-split the signal. They work for short cable runs between identical TVs, but degrade signal quality and almost always fail HDCP checks. Avoid for streaming.
Active splitters ($25-60): Have a chip inside that boosts the signal and properly handles HDCP negotiation. These are the ones that work reliably with streaming devices.
For streaming from a Roku, Fire TV, or Apple TV to two displays, always use an active HDCP 2.2 compliant splitter.
4K Splitting Limitations
Splitting a 4K signal to two displays requires significantly more bandwidth than 1080p. Most consumer-grade 4K HDMI splitters:
- Support 4K at 30fps to two outputs simultaneously
- May not support 4K at 60fps to both outputs (may downscale one or both to 1080p)
- HDR10 is supported by most; Dolby Vision is rarely supported in split mode
Practical implication: If you're streaming 4K HDR from one room to another, you'll typically get 4K at 30fps on both screens, or 4K at 60fps on one screen and 1080p on the other. For most content (streaming movies, TV shows), 4K 30fps is indistinguishable from 4K 60fps.
For live sports at 4K 60fps, a splitter may not deliver the ideal output to both screens simultaneously.
Alternative: Two Separate Streaming Devices
For most households wanting streaming on two TVs, buying two cheap streaming devices is simpler and more flexible than a splitter.
- 2x Roku Express 4K+: ~$70 total, each TV independently controllable
- 2x Fire TV Stick Lite: ~$56 total, each TV independently controllable
Both options let different people watch different content simultaneously, and cost similar to a good HDMI splitter when you factor in cables.
The splitter makes sense only when:
- You specifically want the same content on both TVs simultaneously
- Cables between TVs are already run and a second streaming device would require additional outlet/internet setup
- The use case is genuinely simultaneous same-content viewing (sports bar, waiting room, etc.)
How to Set Up an HDMI Splitter for Streaming
- Connect your streaming device (Roku/Fire TV/Apple TV) to the splitter's HDMI input
- Run HDMI cables from the splitter's output ports to each TV
- Power the splitter (most active splitters use a USB or barrel jack power cable)
- Switch both TVs to the HDMI input that the splitter cable is connected to
- The splitter will negotiate HDCP with the streaming device and both TVs
Troubleshooting HDCP errors:
- Ensure both TVs are HDCP 2.2 compatible (check TV specifications)
- Try a different HDMI input on one or both TVs
- Power cycle the streaming device with the splitter already connected
- Check that you're using HDMI 2.0 cables (older HDMI 1.4 cables may cause issues)
When to Use an HDMI Splitter vs. What to Buy Instead
| Use Case | Recommendation | |----------|---------------| | Same content, same room | HDMI splitter works well | | Same content, adjacent rooms | Splitter + long HDMI cable (up to 15 feet active) | | Different content, different rooms | Two separate streaming devices | | One main TV + smaller display | Splitter or wireless HDMI extender | | Commercial/business multi-display | Professional HDMI distribution amplifier |
Check Price: HDMI Splitter (HDCP 2.2) →
Alternative: Two Roku Express 4K+ Devices →
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Editorial Team
Our editorial team consists of streaming experts who research and test products so you can make informed buying decisions.