People who smugly cancelled their TV licence because they ‘only watch Netflix now’ may soon have a rude awakening.
According to reports, ministers are considering plans that could see households paying the licence fee even if they primarily watch streaming services like Netflix or Amazon’s Prime Video.
In other words: congratulations on escaping linear television, but the BBC may still be arriving at your doorstep clutching a clipboard and demanding £180 anyway.
The reported discussions come amid growing concern over the future of the BBC, which has warned it faces ‘managed decline’ after a major drop in income over the last decade.
The broadcaster has already implemented a huge cost-cutting programme expected to result in around 2,000 job losses, while executives continue searching for ways to stop Britain’s biggest cultural institution quietly dying.
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Under current rules, households only need a licence if they watch live television or use BBC iPlayer.
But according to industry sources cited by The Times, the government is now exploring whether the fee could be broadened to cover streaming platforms too.
The logic appears to be that modern viewing habits have changed so dramatically that the current model is beginning to look increasingly detached from reality.
Millions of younger viewers now spend more time inside algorithmic content vortexes than they do watching traditional broadcast television.
And yet the BBC still occupies a weirdly central place in British life, with many arguing for its cultural importance even as they decline to pay license fees.
Nobody wants to pay for it until there’s a royal death, a World Cup, a national emergency, or a David Attenborough documentary involving a heart-wrenching penguin subplot.
Critics of the new fee concept argue it would be absurd to effectively tax people for using streaming platforms regardless of whether they engage with BBC content at all. One streaming industry source described the idea as ‘desperate’, warning that forcing universal payment risks alienating audiences further.
Others, however, fear the alternative could fundamentally reshape the broadcaster beyond recognition.
A subscription model has also reportedly been discussed, though Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy has previously suggested that could undermine the BBC’s role as a shared national institution.
Advertising, meanwhile, raises concerns about damaging commercial broadcasters such as ITV and Channel 4.
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