True 4K UHD streams
3840 x 2160 pixels at 50/60 fps, hardware-decoded.
ITS IPTV streams in 4K UHD with HDR (HDR10 and Dolby Vision where the source supports it) across the full premium-cinema and live-sports lineup. AntiFreeze technology adapts bitrate in real time so 4K plays smoothly on connections from 25 Mbps. Works on every modern Smart TV, Firestick 4K Max, Apple TV 4K, Nvidia Shield, and 4K-capable smartphone.
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3840 x 2160 pixels at 50/60 fps, hardware-decoded.
Frame-by-frame metadata for the deepest blacks and brightest highlights.
Object-based surround on Apple TV 4K and Fire TV Stick 4K Max.
4K UHD (3840 × 2160 pixels) is four times the resolution of HD (1920 × 1080). On a 55" or larger TV, the difference is immediately visible — finer textures, more detail in shadows and highlights, and smoother panning during fast-moving sports. ITS IPTV carries 4K UHD on Sky Cinema, HBO 4K, Disney+-equivalent prestige series, and the full premium-cinema VOD lineup.
HDR (High Dynamic Range) extends the range between the brightest and darkest parts of the image. HDR10 is the baseline; Dolby Vision adds frame-by-frame metadata for more dynamic tone mapping. ITS IPTV streams both where the source channel provides them — typically on premium cinema, prestige series, and major sport.
Not every IPTV-capable device handles 4K HDR cleanly. Apple TV 4K (2nd or 3rd gen) is the gold standard — it carries hardware HEVC decoding plus Dolby Vision passthrough. Fire TV Stick 4K Max is excellent value at $50 with Wi-Fi 6E and 4K HDR support. Nvidia Shield is the premium Android option for power users. Modern Smart TVs (2020+) handle native 4K decoding directly without an external box.
For older devices: Fire TV Stick (non-4K), Apple TV HD, and TVs from 2017 or earlier do not support 4K. They will downgrade to 1080p automatically — the picture is still excellent but loses the 4K resolution advantage.
A stable 25 Mbps connection comfortably handles 4K UHD. For HDR or Dolby Vision, 35 Mbps is recommended. Multiple simultaneous 4K streams (3 devices on Cinema plan) want 75–100 Mbps and ideally a wired Ethernet connection on at least one device. Wi-Fi 6 or Wi-Fi 6E handles 4K reliably; Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac) handles single 4K streams but can struggle with multiple at once during peak congestion.
The biggest barrier to 4K IPTV is not raw bandwidth but stability. ITS IPTV's AntiFreeze technology monitors connection quality in real time and adjusts bitrate within milliseconds — so a momentary Wi-Fi dip during a Premier League goal does not turn into a 30-second buffer. The result is what most members describe as cinema-grade stability: 4K plays smoothly on connections that struggle with Netflix 4K, because adaptive switching is more aggressive.