Most IPTV pages for Toronto lead with a number they cannot back up. Here is the honest version: IPTVCORE4K carries 25,000+ live channels and 100,000+ movies and series, including CBC, CTV, Global, Citytv, TSN and Sportsnet, plus RDS, TVA, Noovo and Radio-Canada in French. We run at 99.9% uptime. Not 100% – nobody has that, and anyone who claims it is guessing. Streams are HD, FHD, UHD or 4K where the broadcast allows, which is a real qualifier, not a hedge. There is no contract. You pay once per term, in USD. Toronto matters to us because it is the most fragmented sports market in Canada, and 2026 made it worse. Below is what that actually costs you.
Why does watching the Leafs, Jays and Raptors cost a Toronto household two sports bills?
Because no single provider carries all five Toronto teams, and the split is not a marketing story. It is the actual rights map.
The Maple Leafs are split three ways. In the 2025-26 season, 26 regional games ran on Bell’s TSN4 and 14 on Rogers’ Sportsnet Ontario, with 36 national games on Sportsnet – plus six national games on Prime Video, which we do not carry. The Raptors are split evenly – TSN and Sportsnet carry 41 regular-season games each. That is a national split, not a regional one, because the Raptors are Canada’s only NBA team, so there is no regional blackout structure to work around. The practical consequence: TSN and Sportsnet together get you the overwhelming majority of Leafs and Raptors games, but not literally every one, and we would rather tell you that than let you find out in October. One forward caveat – the 2026-27 split may shift. Rogers has said its new deal carries more national games and fewer regional blackouts.
The Blue Jays are the simple one. Rogers owns the team and Sportsnet, so there is no split – Rogers puts all 162 games across its own Sportsnet channels and streams every one on Sportsnet+.
Then the two that are not on cable at all. Toronto FC is on Apple TV, which carries every match in Canada. As of the 2026 season the standalone MLS Season Pass is gone – matches are now included with a standard, paid Apple TV subscription rather than sold as a separate add-on. TSN airs select matches in English. The Argonauts are on TSN, which carries every game of the 2026 season, plus playoffs and the Grey Cup. That changes next year: under a six-year Bell Media/DAZN agreement announced in May 2026, from 2027 TSN takes 60 of 81 regular-season games, six playoff games and the Grey Cup, while DAZN exclusively streams 21 Saturday Night Football games. 2026 is the last year TSN has it all.
The 2026 change that matters most: CBC no longer airs NHL games. CBC and Sportsnet could not agree a new sublicence, so Hockey Night in Canada’s CBC run ended. From the 2026-27 season, year one of Rogers’ 12-year, $11-billion CDN rights deal running through 2037-38, there is no men’s NHL hockey on conventional free over-the-air TV in Canada for the first time since 1952. If you were watching the Leafs on an antenna on Saturday night, that option is gone. CBC replaces it with a Saturday Canadian-athletes show on CBC and CBC Gem and keeps PWHL rights.
Two honest caveats. First, we carry TSN and Sportsnet – we do not carry Apple TV, Prime Video or DAZN, and we are not going to pretend otherwise. Those are where Toronto FC, six Leafs games and, from 2027, Saturday CFL live, and they are not us. Second, blackouts are real. They are set by leagues and broadcasters, not by your provider, and no IPTV service defeats them. Anyone telling you they do is selling you something they cannot deliver.
What do I actually need to run this in a Toronto condo or a Scarborough semi?
Less than you think. 25 Mbps handles HD. 50 Mbps covers 4K. That is the entire technical requirement.
For context on what that means in Toronto: mainstream plans here run well past both bars. Rogers’ Xfinity tiers land in the hundreds of Mbps, and Bell’s fibre reaches most of the city, with Rogers and Beanfield covering somewhat less and serving different building types – Rogers across broader residential areas, Beanfield concentrated in condos and multi-unit buildings. You are not short on speed here.
One Toronto note on upload: Bell’s fibre is symmetrical or near-symmetrical, Rogers’ cable is markedly not. For watching TV this is irrelevant – streaming is a download job. We mention it only because it is the thing people in Liberty Village argue about.
- Android TV box or stick
- Fire TV
- Smart TV with a compatible app
- Phone, tablet or computer
If you already stream anything today, your hardware is fine. You do not need a new TV and you do not need a technician in your unit – which, in a building with an in-suite access process, is the part that usually saves you the most time.
What does this cost compared to a real Rogers or Bell bill?
Here is our pricing. One-time payment per term, in USD, no contract, no auto-renew trap.
| Term | One-time price (USD) | Works out to (USD/month) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 month | $15.94 USD | $15.94 |
| 3 months | $39.94 USD | $13.31 |
| 6 months | $48.94 USD | $8.16 |
| 12 months | $67.94 USD | $5.66 |
Now the comparison – and here is where most pages start inventing.
We are not going to quote you a precise Rogers or Bell bill. Their pricing varies by address and promo window, and any exact figure we print would be wrong for most of you and stale within a month. What we can say, based on what both carriers publicly advertise: entry packages generally do not include TSN and Sportsnet at all, so a sports-capable package starts well above the advertised entry tier, and bundle pricing runs roughly $100 to $260 CAD a month depending on tier and term. Check your own address on their site. That is the only number true for you.
The promo-to-regular cliff is the real pattern, and it does not need a fake decimal to make the point. Carriers advertise a promotional rate for a fixed term – usually 12 or 24 months – and the regular rate that follows is materially higher. The promo is not the price. It is the first twelve months of the price. Rogers also raised internet and TV package fees by $7 CAD a month in March 2026.
Standalone sports streaming does not rescue the math either. Bell raised TSN’s price on 14 April 2026: it is now $29.99 CAD a month or $249.99 CAD a year, up from $24.99 and $199.90. Sportsnet+ is a separate subscription on top. Two services, two bills, and you still do not get Toronto FC.
Our 12-month term is $67.94 USD once. Two honest notes. Bell and Rogers prices are CAD; ours are USD – not a dollar-for-dollar swap. And we will not pretend our term replaces a bundle that includes your internet. It does not, and you still need an ISP. This compares the TV half of the bill only.
Why are Toronto households actually switching?
Three reasons, and none of them are the ones ads usually give.
Bill creep. The promo-to-regular cliff is the single most common trigger we hear about. You sign at the promotional rate, you forget, and month 13 arrives at the regular one. Nothing broke. The contract just did what it always said it would.
The condo problem. This is the most Toronto thing on this page. Bulk billing agreements between ISPs and developers give every unit turnkey internet paid through rent or condo fees rather than a separate bill. Beanfield surveyed 110 new Toronto-area projects from January 2022 and found 54 of them already had bulk deals in place, spanning almost 40,000 units; it estimates such deals cover close to half of all new condo or apartment developments in the area. Beanfield asked the CRTC to outlaw them, arguing they eliminate end-user choice. Rogers argues they do not eliminate choice, do not constitute an undue preference, and let residents benefit from discounted broadband. Some building owners have gone further and used exclusivity arrangements to block rivals from installing in-building fibre. If you live in a newer Liberty Village or Distillery District tower, you may not actually be able to choose your ISP. What you can choose is what runs over it.
Churn. Toronto rents softened in CMHC’s October 2025 survey. Average purpose-built rent is $1,917 CAD a month. Condo two-bedrooms average $2,891 against $2,046 for purpose-built – 41% higher by CMHC’s own comparison – and condo rents fell 1.1% year-over-year, from $2,924 in October 2024 to $2,891. When rents move and options open up, people move with them. A two-year TV term does not move with them gracefully. A one-time term with no contract does.
Add the commute. Toronto has the longest average commute in Canada. If you are getting home at 7pm, the thing you want is the game already on, not a call about your box rental.
I want channels from home as well as Canadian TV. What do you carry?
Canadian first, honestly. The core of what we do is Canadian: CBC, CTV, Global, Citytv, TSN, Sportsnet, and French networks including RDS, TVA, Noovo and Radio-Canada. Both French and English.
We also carry international channels across a wide range of languages. That matters here more than almost anywhere. In the 2021 Census, 2,862,850 people in the Toronto CMA – 46.6% – were foreign-born immigrants, with India, China and the Philippines the top three places of birth. 57.0% of Toronto CMA residents belonged to a visible minority group, up from 51.4% in 2016. Walk Kensington Market or through Scarborough and the demand for channels from home is not a marketing theory.
Now the part most sites will not tell you. We do not publish a channel list. That is deliberate, and we would rather say why than pretend the page is missing something. A full published line-up is a document we would rather not hand to anyone, competitors included. So we will not name a specific foreign network, we will not tell you we carry some exact number of channels in your language, and we will not invent a figure to close a sale.
What we will do: give you a 24-hour free trial with no card, so you can look for your channels yourself. Or ask us on live chat or WhatsApp and we will tell you straight whether we have what you want. If we do not, we will say so. That is a worse sales pitch and a better answer.
How do I get started?
- Start the 24-hour free trial. No card. You are checking whether your channels are there and whether the picture holds on your connection at your hour of the evening – not ours.
- Test at the honest time. Try it Saturday night with a Leafs game on, or during a Jays broadcast. Any service looks fine at 2pm on a Tuesday. If it holds at peak on your building’s connection, that is a real result.
- Check your speed. 25 Mbps for HD, 50 Mbps for 4K. Most Toronto plans clear both. If you are on a bulk-billed condo connection you did not choose, test on it – that is your actual connection.
- Pick a term. 1 month $15.94 USD, 3 months $39.94 USD, 6 months $48.94 USD, or 12 months $67.94 USD ($5.66 per month). One payment. No contract, no auto-renewal you have to fight.
- Set up your device. Android TV box or stick, Fire TV, smart TV, phone, tablet or computer. Support is 24/7 on live chat and WhatsApp, which in this city means someone is there when you get home at 7:15 after a long ride on the subway.
- Keep your ISP. We are the TV half. Whatever Bell, Rogers, Beanfield or your building’s bulk deal gives you stays exactly as it is.