TV licence fee to rise by £5.50 to £180 from April
The cost of a TV licence currently increases in line with inflation each year until 2027.
www.bbc.co.ukHere’s the latest on the UK TV licence news.
The licence fee rose to £180 per year from April 2026, up by £5.50, with discussions ongoing about future funding models for the BBC beyond 2027 [BBC News article on 2026-02-06]. This is part of a broader government review of BBC funding and the licence’s long-term role, including possible moves to varied rates or alternative funding methods in the future [BBC News article; government briefings cited in coverage]. The increase maintains free licences for older pensioners still on Pension Credit and related concessions [BBC News article].[1]
Prior context: the fee had previously been set at £174.50 from April 2025, with plans to tailor payment options and maintain concessions for certain groups; the government signalled a broad review of funding models for the BBC, including the potential for advertising or subscription-based models in the longer term [MoneySavingExpert reporting on the 2025 rise; government statements referenced in coverage].[2]
For 2026, enforcement and eligibility rules remained in place: if you watch live TV or use BBC iPlayer to access BBC programming, you typically need a licence; non-payment can lead to enforcement action and fines. The standard rate cited in some local outlets for 2026 is around £159–£180 depending on the source, with the official price confirmed by TV Licensing and government announcements in 2026; exemptions and concessions apply (e.g., some residents in care homes, the blind, and certain pensioners).[3]
Background and broader context: the TV licence has been a long-running funding mechanism for the BBC, with ongoing debate about replacing the flat-rate household licence with targeted charges or an alternative funding model; public discussion continues about ensuring continued funding for BBC services while addressing affordability for households [Guardian coverage of broader debate; NAO statements on governance and funding context referenced in discussions].[5][7]
If you’d like, I can pull up the most recent official TV Licensing page for current rates, exemptions, and payment options, or summarize how the 2026 changes compare with prior years.
The cost of a TV licence currently increases in line with inflation each year until 2027.
www.bbc.co.ukThe annual cost of a standard colour TV licence will rise to £174.50 from 1 April 2025 – an increase of £5 on the current price of £169.50 a year.
www.moneysavingexpert.comThe C&AG has reported on the BBC's arrangements for assessment, collection and proper allocation of the licence fee.
www.nao.org.ukIf you watch 'live' TV, you need a TV licence; there's no avoiding it. But if you watch catch-up without using BBC iPlayer, you could ditch it & save £100s - MoneySavingExpert.
www.moneysavingexpert.comTV licence UK rules in 2026 explained: who must pay, £159 cost, streaming and BBC iPlayer rules, TV Licensing visits, enforcement powers, exemptions and what happens if you do not pay.
westminsterpimliconews.co.ukThe TV Licence fee increased to £174.50 in April 2025, in line with annual CPI inflation.
www.express.co.ukEach year, tens of thousands of UK citizens are charged with non-payment of their TV licence fee – from the man who missed payments while in hospital, to a woman with a brain injury who forgot to pay
www.theguardian.com