IPTV in Vancouver, BC

IPTV Vancouver: Every Canucks Game, No Cable Box

25,000+ live channels in French and English · no contract · 24/7 support · from $5.66 USD/month on the 12-month term

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25,000+Live channels
100,000+Movies & series
4KWhere broadcast allows
24hFree trial, no card

Most IPTV pages for Vancouver 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. Canadian networks including CBC, CTV, Global, Citytv, TSN and Sportsnet. French networks including RDS, TVA, Noovo and Radio-Canada. HD, FHD, UHD and 4K where the broadcast allows. We target 99.9% uptime — we will not claim 100%, because nobody has that. No contract, one-time payment per term, 24/7 support on live chat and WhatsApp. There is a 24-hour free trial and it does not ask for a card. Test it on your own connection in Kits or Yaletown before you believe a word of this.

Can I actually watch the Canucks, the Whitecaps and the Lions?

This is the section most IPTV pages get wrong, so here is the real 2026 rights picture in Vancouver.

Canucks (NHL). Sportsnet, exclusively. Rogers renewed exclusive Canadian English-language NHL TV and streaming rights in a 12-year, $11.2-billion deal starting 2026-27, and holds Canucks TV and radio rights through 2033. The CBC sublicence expired at the end of the 2026 Stanley Cup playoffs and was not renewed, so as of fall 2026 Hockey Night in Canada is no longer on CBC. For the first time since CBC began televising NHL games in 1952 there is no free over-the-air way to watch a Canucks game. We carry Sportsnet. We are not going to pretend that is a loophole — it is simply where the games are now.

Whitecaps (MLS). Split rights, and the split is the whole point. Every regular-season match, Leagues Cup and the MLS Cup Playoffs are on Apple TV — as of the 2026 season the standalone MLS Season Pass was folded into the standard Apple TV subscription. Separately, a selected subset — 14 Whitecaps matches in 2026 — is simulcast on TSN in English and RDS in French. We carry TSN and RDS, so those 14 are with us. The rest are on Apple TV and we cannot change that. Anyone telling you otherwise is selling you something.

BC Lions (CFL). TSN in English and RDS in French, exclusive in Canada through Bell Media, with games also carried on CTV. TSN carries every game of the CFL regular season and playoffs. Worth knowing: 2026 is the final year of the CFL’s exclusive TSN/RDS deal, so the picture may change after this season.

One honest caveat. Regional blackouts are real. They are set by the leagues and the broadcasters, not by us, and we do not defeat them. Any service claiming it does is either lying or describing something you should not be part of.

What do I need to run this in a Vancouver apartment?

Less than you think. Here are the numbers.

  • 25 Mbps handles HD comfortably.
  • 50 Mbps covers 4K where the broadcast allows.

That is well under what either local provider sells as an entry plan. TELUS PureFibre has a wide fibre footprint in Vancouver. Rogers is the other half of the duopoly, with Shaw Direct satellite as a third option.

The local nuance worth flagging: coverage is uneven by housing type. Fibre is strongest in newer condos and multi-unit buildings, while plenty of single-family homes on the west side are still on cable internet. TELUS will not publish a city-wide fibre percentage and directs you to enter your address instead — so we are not going to publish one either. Check your own address. Either way, 25 Mbps clears the bar on cable just as well as on fibre.

Devices: any Android TV or Google TV box, Amazon Fire TV Stick, Nvidia Shield, smart TV, phone, tablet, laptop, or a MAG box. If you rent — and in Vancouver you very likely do — the useful part is that none of this is wired into the building. It goes in a bag when you move to Mount Pleasant.

What does this cost against a TELUS or Rogers bill?

Our pricing, in USD, one-time per term. No contract, no auto-renewal trap.

Term One-time price Works out to
1 month $15.94 USD $15.94 USD/month
3 months $39.94 USD $13.31 USD/month
6 months $48.94 USD $8.16 USD/month
12 months $67.94 USD $5.66 USD/month

Now the comparison — and here we are going to do something most pages will not, which is decline to give you one.

Cable and satellite TV pricing in Vancouver is promotional, address-dependent and changes constantly. We could not verify current Vancouver figures we would be willing to print, so we are not printing any. That includes the sports tiers: TSN and Sportsnet are not in the entry-level TV package at either provider — they live in add-on theme packs and sports add-ons, and we could not verify an exact current price for a Vancouver TV package that actually includes them.

So do this instead. Load your provider’s page with your own postcode, read the real number off the screen, and add the sports pack you would actually need. Compare that to $5.66 USD a month on our 12-month term and draw your own conclusion. A number you read yourself is worth more than a number we made up.

Why are Vancouver households switching right now?

Three reasons, and all three are specific to this city.

One: the hockey paywall closed in 2026. Hockey Night in Canada left CBC in the fall. Every Canucks game is now behind a paid Sportsnet subscription, and because Rogers owns Canucks TV and radio rights through 2033 there is no alternative carrier to switch to. Rogers also shut down Sportsnet 650, the Canucks’ radio home, in July 2026. If you were the household that watched on CBC for free and listened on 650, 2026 took both away in the same year.

Two: Vancouver rents, and renters churn. At the 2021 Census the City of Vancouver had 305,340 households with a homeownership rate of 45.5% — meaning roughly 54.5% of households rent. Renters move often and frequently cannot dictate what is wired into the building. A two-year cable term is a bad fit for a lease that might not be renewed.

Three: the arithmetic against rent. In Q1 2025 Vancouver had the highest average asking rent for a two-bedroom apartment of any Canadian CMA at $3,170 — above Toronto, Victoria and Ottawa. A three-figure monthly TV bill lands very differently on top of that than it does elsewhere.

There is a fourth, smaller one: the Pacific time zone. Being three hours behind Toronto means national feeds land at awkward local hours, and 2026 made that obvious — the Whitecaps set home kickoffs at 4:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. PT, and the February Olympics in Milan-Cortina ran at a nine-hour offset from here. Catch-up mattered more than usual this year.

Do you carry channels in my language?

Straight answer: our focus is Canadian. That is what we build the service around — CBC, CTV, Global, Citytv, TSN and Sportsnet on the English side, RDS, TVA, Noovo and Radio-Canada on the French side. French and English content, properly.

Beyond that, we carry international channels across a wide range of languages. What we will not do is publish a channel list or give you a count per language on a public page.

The way to resolve this is not to argue about it. Take the 24-hour free trial, load the guide, and search for what you actually want to watch. No card, no call. If it is not there, you have lost a day and nothing else.

How do I get started?

  1. Check your speed. Run a speed test on the connection you will actually stream on. 25 Mbps for HD, 50 Mbps for 4K where the broadcast allows.
  2. Start the 24-hour free trial. No card required. You get the real service, not a demo reel.
  3. Tell us your device. Fire TV Stick, Android TV or Google TV box, Nvidia Shield, smart TV, phone, tablet, laptop, MAG box. Our team sends the setup for your specific one.
  4. Load your credentials and test what matters to you. Pull up Sportsnet, TSN, RDS, CBC. Check the catalogue. Check it at the hour you would normally watch, not at 2 a.m. when every network is quiet.
  5. Pick a term if it works. 1 month $15.94 USD, 3 months $39.94 USD, 6 months $48.94 USD, 12 months $67.94 USD. One-time payment, no contract, no auto-renewal.
  6. Keep the support channel. 24/7 on live chat and WhatsApp. We target 99.9% uptime, not 100% — when something does go down, you should be able to reach a person, and you can.

IPTV Vancouver: your questions, answered

Yes, and this is one of the better reasons to. A building's bulk TV arrangement is a TV arrangement — IPTVCORE4K rides on your internet connection, not on the building's cable drop. You need 25 Mbps for HD or 50 Mbps for 4K where the broadcast allows, which a downtown condo connection clears easily. Nothing gets installed, nothing gets wired in, and nothing needs the strata's permission. Take the 24-hour free trial on the building's connection and see for yourself before you assume it is blocked.

The CBC sublicensing deal expired at the end of the 2026 Stanley Cup playoffs and was not renewed. As of fall 2026 CBC no longer airs Hockey Night in Canada, so for the first time since CBC began televising NHL games in 1952 there is no free over-the-air way to watch the Canucks. Rogers renewed exclusive Canadian English-language NHL rights in a 12-year, $11.2-billion deal from 2026-27 and holds Canucks TV and radio rights through 2033 — so there is no alternative carrier to switch to. We carry Sportsnet, which is where the games are. We do not fix it, because nobody can. What we do is make Sportsnet cheaper to reach than a cable tier with a sports add-on on top — price your own postcode and compare it to $5.66 USD a month on our 12-month term. Regional blackouts still apply and are set by the league and the broadcaster, not by us.

Depends what you want. Apple TV has every Whitecaps regular-season match, Leagues Cup and the MLS Cup Playoffs — as of the 2026 season MLS Season Pass was folded into the standard Apple TV subscription, so if you have Apple TV you have the matches. We carry TSN and RDS, which simulcast a selected subset: 14 Whitecaps matches in 2026. So for the Caps specifically, we add nothing you do not already have. Where we add something is everything else — Canucks on Sportsnet, BC Lions on TSN and RDS, CBC, CTV, Global, Citytv, and 100,000+ movies and series. Keep Apple TV for the football. Use us for the rest.

No. There is no contract. Payment is one-time per term — $15.94 USD for one month, $39.94 USD for three, $48.94 USD for six, $67.94 USD for twelve — and nothing auto-renews. This matters more here than most places: the City of Vancouver had 305,340 households at the 2021 Census with a homeownership rate of just 45.5%, so roughly 54.5% of us rent, and renters move. Your account is tied to you, not to an address or a building. When you move to Mount Pleasant or Grandview-Woodland, the Fire Stick goes in the box and it works the same night you plug it back in. No install window, no disconnection fee, no transfer call.

Yes. The Vancouver fibre picture is genuinely uneven by housing type — TELUS PureFibre is strongest in newer condos and multi-unit buildings, while many single-family homes are still limited to cable internet — but our requirement is a speed, not a technology. 25 Mbps handles HD and 50 Mbps covers 4K where the broadcast allows, and a Rogers cable plan clears both. Fibre gives you better upload and lower latency, neither of which matters much for watching television. Run a speed test, then run the 24-hour free trial on your own line. If it stutters, you have lost a day and no money.

The three-hour offset from Toronto is real and 2026 made it obvious — the Whitecaps set home kickoffs at 4:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. PT, and the Milan-Cortina Olympics in February ran at a nine-hour offset from here. Alongside the 25,000+ live channels we carry 100,000+ movies and series on demand, which is where most people go when a feed ran while they were at work. We target 99.9% uptime rather than 100%, and support is 24/7 on live chat and WhatsApp — which, given the time zone, is a more useful promise here than an eastern-hours support desk.

Ready to try IPTV in Vancouver?

Twenty-four hours, full access, no card. Test it on your own connection before you spend anything.

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