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Cutting the cable cord can still cost you $100 a month

Don't Waste Your Money
Posted at 9:14 AM, Feb 20, 2017
and last updated 2017-02-24 19:06:29-05

The cable TV world is changing at a dizzying pace: Time Warner Cable is now Spectrum, Comcast is expanding its Xfinity service, and the hottest rumor is that Verizon might buy Charter.

It all has customers like Sheila Topmiller reeling, because she says every time something changes, her bill jumps again.

"It went from $152 to $180 when I got my first new Spectrum bill," she said. "That's a $28 increase in one month."

The result: A lot of people are considering buying an antenna for local stations, then streaming their favorite cable shows, even HBO and ESPN, which are now finally available for streaming after years of holding out.

Add in Sling TV, Sony's PlayStation Vue, DirecTV Now, HuluPlus and Netflix, and you can now watch almost all the programming you used to have on cable without the big cable bill. 

Or so it seems.

Much costlier than many people think

Unfortunately, cutting the cord can cost more than you think. Just run some numbers:

  • SlingTV, PlayStation Vue, or DirecTV Now all run roughly $35 a month, to stream their TV service via your internet line.
  • HBO streaming costs $15.
  • Netflix, essential to many people, is $9 a month.
  • And don't forget your high speed internet, at $45 a month.

Forget about budget internet plans for $25 a month.  Spectrum is ending Time Warner's value internet plans (that most recently were $29 a month). 

Even if you can still find a cheaper, slower speed internet plan, you will be frustrated trying to stream so much TV content and movies.

You're now up to $105 a month, which may leave you saying "doesn't that stink."

But wait, there's more, as the infomercials used to say. Do you want some sort of DVR service?  After all, most of these services still don't offer full DVR time shifting service.

Then add on Hulu Plus, for another $9, so you are now up to almost $115 a month.

Not as Convenient

Worse, the silicon valley websiteTechTimes.com says none of these duplicate the full "cable experience," with  full-feature DVR, on-demand movies, and ease of picking up just one remote and surfing channels, with a beer in one hand and your head on the arm of the couch.

You will constantly be shuttling between different TV inputs and devices.

You'll also need an antenna for local TV stations, and with some of these services, you still won't get ESPN.

So add up what these new services will cost. If it's much over $110 a month, cable may be worth keeping just for the convenience.

That way you don't waste your money.

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