Coming to Android
IPTV Player One for Android: in development
IPTV Player One is a desktop IPTV player for Windows today. An Android version is in development, with phones, tablets and Android TV as the goal. There is no release date yet, and we will not name one until we can keep it.
| Status | In development |
|---|---|
| Platform | Android (which devices the first release supports will be confirmed at release) |
| Playlist formats | M3U link and Xtream Codes (Windows version today) |
| Free trial | 14 days, starts at first playback, no account (Windows version) |
| Price | $5.95 per year or $9.95 lifetime, per device (Windows version) |
Built with phones, tablets and Android TV in mind
An IPTV player for Android is in active development. Phones, tablets and Android TV are all on the target list, though we are not promising yet which of those the first release will cover. We are not naming release dates either: a date that slips helps nobody. Versions for macOS and iPhone are in development as well.
One thing is already certain. Like the Windows app, the Android version will be a player only: it contains no channels, content or subscriptions. You bring your own playlist from a legal source, as an M3U link or an Xtream Codes login. The guide on IPTV and the law explains what that means in practice.
What you can use today
If you have a Windows 10 or 11 PC (64-bit), there is no need to wait. The Windows version does the full job: live TV, movies and series with groups, search and favorites, continue watching with progress, multiple playlists, a parental lock with a PIN on groups, and subtitle and audio track selection.
And here is the part that matters if your living room already runs on Android: the Windows app casts to Chromecast and Google TV. You choose the subtitle and audio track on the cast itself, and the subtitles stay in sync. So while the native Android app is still in the works, a Chromecast or Google TV on the same Wi-Fi network as your PC already puts your playlist on the big screen. The Chromecast IPTV player page shows how that works.
Try it free while you wait
The Windows app comes with a 14-day free trial that starts the first time you play something, with no account required. After that it is $5.95 per year or $9.95 once for lifetime access, per device. Download IPTV Player One or look at the pricing first.
Want to hear when the Android version lands? Email support@iptvplayerone.com with a short note and we will message you when it is out. We usually reply within a day.
Frequently asked questions
Will it be on Google Play?
That is the plan: when the Android version is ready, we want it on Google Play. If you would like a message the moment it ships, send a short email to support@iptvplayerone.com and we will let you know.
Will it work on Android TV?
Android TV is a goal for the Android version, alongside phones and tablets. Which devices the first release covers is a detail we will confirm at release. In the meantime, if your TV runs Google TV or has a Chromecast connected, the Windows app can already cast to it today.
What can I use today?
The Windows app on Windows 10 or 11 (64-bit). It plays live TV, movies and series from an M3U link or Xtream Codes login, and it casts to Chromecast and Google TV with subtitle and audio track choice. The 14-day free trial starts at your first playback, no account needed.
IPTV Player One contains no channels, content or subscriptions. It is a media player for playlists you legally own or are licensed to use. Using it for pirated content is not permitted.
Related pages
IPTV player for Windows 10 and 11: a real desktop app
IPTV player for Windows 10 and 11 with M3U and Xtream Codes support, Chromecast casting, and a free 14-day trial that starts at your first playback.
IPTV Player for Mac: macOS Version in Development
IPTV Player One for macOS is in development. Sign up to hear when it launches, or use the full Windows version today with Chromecast casting and synced subtitles.
IPTV Player for iPhone: iOS Version in Development
An IPTV player for iPhone and iPad is in development, with the App Store as the plan. See what is coming and what you can already use on Windows today.