Philo offers a wide selection of channels, but you may be wondering what the Philo channel list might look like. You can get 63 channels (as of this time of writing) through Philo making the full Philo channel list incredibly strong for the low price, although there are some limitations if you’re a sports fan or want local broadcast networks.
We’ve also created a free channel schedule for Philo that you can use to learn what’s playing on any Philo channel.
What is Philo? Philo Service Breakdown
Philo is a “skinny bundle” internet TV streaming service. This small startup streaming service started offering its low-cost channel packages in Fall 2017. Since then, the service has added quite a few customers and enjoyed major investments from content providers.
Philo’s primary goal is to provide entertainment TV options for the lowest possible cost. As of this time of writing, Philo provides one streaming service package: a 63 channel package for $20 per month.
Philo’s packages do not exceed those price ranges. There are also no hidden fees, and unlike most of its competitors on the market, there are very available add-ons. That means the maximum price you will pay for Philo, at least presently, is $20 per month. No contract, you are free to cancel the subscription anytime. You can add Starz for $9/month and Epix for $6/month as additional channels.
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Complete Philo Channels List
Despite its low cost, Philo offers an extensive channel list to its subscribers. As stated, there’s just one package that carries 63 channels.
Philo 63 channel package
- A&E
- AMC
- American Heroes Channel
- Animal Planet
- aspireTV
- AXS TV
- BBC America
- BBC World News
- BET
- BET Her
- Cheddar
- CLEO TV
- CMT
- Comedy Central
- Cooking Channel
- Crime + Investigation
- Destination America
- Discovery Family
- Discovery Life
- Discovery Channel
- DIY Network
- Food Network
- FYI
- Game Show Network
- getTV
- Great American Country
- Hallmark Channel
- Hallmark Drama
- Hallmark Movies & Mysteries
- HGTV
- History
- IFC
- INSP
- Investigation Discovery
- Law&Crime
- Lifetime
- Lifetime Movies
- Logo
- MotorTrend
- MTV
- MTV Classic
- MTV2
- MTV Live
- Nicktoons
- Nick Jr.
- Nickelodeon
- Oprah Winfrey Network
- ONE TV
- Paramount Network
- PeopleTV
- REVOLT
- Science Channel
- Sundance TV
- Tastemade
- TeenNick
- TLC
- Travel Channel
- TV Land
- TV One
- UPtv
- VH1
- Viceland
- WE tv
Does Philo offer movie channels?
Yes, Philo does offer some movie channels. Several movie channels are available in the core package. Philo also now offers an Epix channel addon ($6/month) and a Starz channel add-on ($9/month), each of which comes with three channels:
- Epix
- Epix Hits
- Epix2
or
- Starz
- Starz Encore
- Starz Kids & Family
HBO and Showtime are not available on Philo.
A few of the dedicated movie channels on Philo are AMC, Paramount Network, and Lifetime Movies, as well as Hallmark Movies & Mysteries, IFC, and Sundance TV. You may find also find movies available on occasion from other networks Philo offers, such as BBC America and Comedy Central, and other cable networks.
Are there sports channels on Philo?
You will not find any sports available on Philo. The only sports-adjacent network available is Velocity, which occasionally shows motorsport competitions. However, the Paramount Network does feature occasional Bellator MMA matches. And if you consider robot fighting a sport, Discovery Channel features the increasingly-popular Battlebots program.
We go into more detail about this below. However, Philo is primarily focused on providing entertainment channels with a few news and lifestyle channels thrown into the mix.
Philo Features
Philo may have some potential users on the fence about signing up, especially given the lack of sports and movie channels. To help sweeten the deal a bit, Philo has fairly generous additional features that might make it a worthwhile subscription for some cord-cutters.
Simultaneous streams
Most cord-cutting services let you stream live and on-demand TV on more than one device, and some are more generous than others. Philo is one of the more generous internet TV services. You can stream on up to 3 devices at a time with the same account.
By comparison, Sling TV only allows for 1 simultaneous stream with Sling Orange (although there are 3 allowed if you go with Sling Blue). AT&T’s WatchTV also only gives users one stream at a time.
Sports-centric streaming service fuboTV (the polar opposite to Philo), Hulu with Live TV, and AT&T TV Now only offer 2 simultaneous streams without any additional cost. However, YouTube TV allows users to stream on 3 devices at a time per account.
That said, Philo doesn’t have the very best simultaneous streaming policy. For anyone who needs as many simultaneous streams as possible, Hulu with Live TV is the best options.
You can purchase an Unlimited Screens add-on from Hulu for $14.99 per month that allows you to stream on as many devices at the same time as you want, so long as they’re all connected to your home network.
Supported devices

You can use Philo on a growing number of devices. At present, Philo can be streamed on Apple TV, Roku, Android TV, Amazon Fire TV, and iOS devices, such as the iPhone or iPad. You can also watch Philo online through a web browser on your Windows or Mac computer. Recently, Philo also added support for 4th gen and later Apple TV devices.
However, there are still no smart TV apps are available, and there are no apps for popular gaming devices. Confusingly, Philo still has no Chromecast at this time either, meaning Chromecast users will have to watch on their mobile devices through the web browser. That option causes significant battery drain, so it’s not preferable. Philo does have an Android app and is on Android TV.
DVR

Philo technically offers an unlimited DVR. Using “Saved shows”, you can record any show, either live or scheduled, for later playback, and you can keep your shows for up to 30 days.
On-demand options
Supplementing its DVR feature, Philo also provides over 2,000 hours of saved on-demand videos from different TV shows and networks. You can also use Philo’s 72-hour rewind option, which lets you watch any TV show or live program within 72 hours after it’s aired, even if you never saved it to your DVR.
Individual network sign-ins (TV Everywhere)
Because Philo is a legitimate streaming option, that means you can log in separately to any app available from networks offered through the service.
For example, you can go to the Discovery website, log in with your Philo account, and watch on-demand shows and live TV.
This not only allows you to bypass simultaneous device limits but gives you access to different shows and episodes you may have missed or that may have expired from your DVR.
Philo Mini-Review
At Flixed, we love to test out the services we recommend, and some of them are services we like to stick with. I’ve been a Philo user for several months, as it’s a service that made sense for my interests.
After several months of use and playing around with its channel options and features, I can say that there are several great things about the service – and some that you probably won’t like. That’s true of any service, of course, but here are the high-level summaries of Philo’s positives and negatives.
The good: Extremely low-cost service with good channels
Philo is perhaps the best low-cost streaming service on the market for anyone who just needs entertainment TV. It currently has no real competition in this space, although there are some milder competitors at this price range, such as T-Mobile’s new $40/month Live TV service that carries 30+ channels. Still, that’s twice the cost of Philo, with half the channels.
For those who really want to save money on their cord-cutting efforts and who need a fully legitimate service with well-known and popular channels, Philo is a good buy.
Additionally, the 30-day DVR may sound limiting, but I’ve rarely experienced a situation where there’s a show or recording I wanted beyond that length of time anyway. The on-demand recordings have served me well, and when an episode I wanted to watch was no longer available on Philo, it’s easy enough for me to log into the different networks’ apps and grab the content from there.
As for streaming quality, Philo has almost never let me down. On rare occasions, I hit slowdowns and buffering, but I attribute those to the very regular network congestion I get in my area during peak internet usage hours.

One of the best parts of Philo is its easy-to-use interface. Philo may be underrated on this end. The service has a slick layout that makes it easy to find what you want with almost no hassle or confusion.
The bad: Limited news, no local TV, and lack of add-ons
Interestingly enough, the best things about Philo are also what might turn off many users to the service. Philo’s cheap price comes at the expense of having no sports channels at all. Not even one. This is because licensing fees for sports channels are expensive. ESPN alone costs cable TV customers $9 per month to access. That’s more than half of what Philo costs without any sports networks.
That’s not to say that you won’t find the occasional sporting event on Philo. Some of the channels they offer, such as Paramount Network, do cover some sports on occasion.
Related: The Complete List of Sports Streaming Services – 100+ Services
By comparison, Sling TV offers ESPN as a featured channel for the $30 a month Sling Orange service package. That means a good portion of your subscription goes to licensing ESPN’s channels. And because that package makes ESPN access the primary focus, Sling TV only offers 30 channels in that package to save on costs and keep the price low.
Philo also saves on costs by limiting the number of news channels available. You can get access to technology and tech news service Cheddar, as well as Cheddar Big News. Philo also offers BBC World News alongside BBC America. Beyond those options, there are no major news channels, such as CNN, Fox News, or MSNBC, to name a few.
You also won’t get access to local TV through Philo, and as such, you don’t get major broadcast networks like ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox, or other channels traditionally available for free over-the-air. As such, Philo is indeed one of the slimmest streaming services on the market, making it a niche service in its own right.
Other Great Streaming Services
Does Philo have everything you need? If not, you may want to consider signing up for Disney+ for more on-demand content only available from Disney, Hulu+Live TV for better access to local channels and major sports networks, or ESPN+ for access to unique and exclusive sporting events, like UFC and MLS.
Thank you so much Sam! Your review was extremely extensive for me, I am thankful for the time you put into it!
I will be giving the trial a chance and cross my fingers it works out.
Have you heard of Discovery +? I found it through Google results and it looks promising but unavailable until January 4th !
Have a wonderful day and Christmas 🎄
Hope you’ve been able to give Discovery+ a trial run! We reviewed it briefly in the newsletter. So far, definitely a good service but lacking live TV, so Philo still has a place.
I Love Philo I’ve had it for several years have told many of my friends and they have joined as well
Keep up the good work.