How to Cancel Your TV Licence in 2026 (and Claim Your Refund)

TV LICENCE GUIDE · Information only, not legal advice. Contains affiliate links; we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Verify your obligations at tvlicensing.co.uk.
By Alex Davies, TV Licensing Researcher · 8 sources cited · Verified June 2026 · 7 min read
£180
That is the 2026 colour TV licence fee you stop paying once you cancel. If you never watch live TV or BBC iPlayer, cancelling is free, takes about 5 minutes, and you can claim a refund for any unused months.
Source: TV Licensing fee schedule, April 2026
Key Takeaways
  • £180/year is what you stop paying once you cancel (2026 colour rate) (TV Licensing)
  • 5 minutes to cancel online via the official No Licence Needed declaration (TV Licensing)
  • 2 years is how long after expiry you can still claim a refund for unused months (TV Licensing)
  • £0 is owed for on-demand ITVX, Channel 4, My5 or Netflix; live TV and BBC iPlayer still need a licence (Communications Act 2003)
  • No entry without a magistrate warrant: officers cannot come in, and you can refuse (TV Licensing)

I have been researching TV licensing and UK streaming access since 2021, and I cancelled my own licence the year the rules around on-demand viewing became clear to me. Everything in this guide reflects the official process I have used and checked myself, not legal advice. Confirm your own situation before you act.

1 Can you legally cancel your TV licence?

You can cancel if nobody in your household watches or records live TV on any channel, and nobody uses BBC iPlayer. That single rule decides everything.

The licence is tied to how you watch, not to owning a television. You can keep your TV, your aerial and your streaming subscriptions and still cancel, as long as you only ever watch content on demand from non-BBC services.

This is the part most people get wrong, so here is the line in plain terms. On-demand and catch-up viewing on ITVX, Channel 4 and My5 is licence-free; live broadcasts and anything on BBC iPlayer are not.

ActivityLicence needed?Source
Watch or record live TV (any channel, any device)YesCommunications Act 2003
BBC iPlayer (any content, live or on demand)YesTV Licensing
Live sport or events streamed as broadcastYesTV Licensing
ITVX, Channel 4, My5 on demandNoTV Licensing
Netflix, Disney Plus, Amazon Prime on demandNoTV Licensing
YouTube clips, DVDs, gamingNoTV Licensing

If your household ticks only the green rows, you are entitled to cancel. For the full legal background, see our guide to VOD and catch-up TV rules and our explainer on what counts as a TV receiver.

1 rule
No live TV on any channel, and no BBC iPlayer. Meet that and you can cancel today, no matter how many screens you own.
TV Licensing, Communications Act 2003

2 How to cancel your TV licence, step by step

Cancelling means submitting an official No Licence Needed declaration to TV Licensing. It is free, and the online route is the fastest.

Have your 10-digit licence number to hand before you start. It is printed on your licence and appears on any email or letter TV Licensing has sent you.

Step 1: Confirm you do not need a licence

Check that nobody at your address watches live TV on any channel or uses BBC iPlayer. If anyone does, even occasionally, you still need a licence.

Step 2: Find your 10-digit licence number

It is on your licence document and on emails or statements from TV Licensing. You need it to cancel and to claim any refund.

Step 3: Submit the No Licence Needed declaration

Go to tvlicensing.co.uk and complete the refund and cancellation request, then the No Licence Needed declaration form. If you prefer, call the number printed on your licence and do it by phone, Monday to Friday.

TV Licensing No Licence Needed declaration form
The official No Licence Needed declaration on tvlicensing.co.uk. This is the form that actually cancels your licence.

Step 4: Cancel your Direct Debit with your bank

TV Licensing will not cancel your Direct Debit for you. Once your declaration is confirmed, cancel the payment in your banking app so nothing else is collected.

Step 5: Keep your confirmation

Save the confirmation email or letter. It is your proof that you declared no licence is needed at your address.

🔍
Not sure if you can cancel? Our free checker gives you a personalised answer in 60 seconds, based on exactly how and what your household watches.
Check if you can cancel

3 How to claim your TV licence refund

If you paid in advance, cancelling may put money back in your pocket. You can claim a refund when your licence has at least one full unused month left.

Refunds are worked out in whole months, so a part-used month at the end is rounded down. At the 2026 fee of £180 per year, each unused month is worth roughly £15.

TV Licensing refund request form
The refund request form. An approved refund cancels the licence automatically.

What is your refund worth?

Enter the number of full, unused months left on your licence to estimate your refund at the 2026 rate of £15 per month.

A few details that catch people out. You can claim up to two years after your licence expiry date, an approved refund cancels the licence automatically, and the money goes back to your original payment method.

21 days
TV Licensing aims to process an approved refund within about three weeks, paid by the method you originally used. Keep your bank details or a forwarding address ready so there is no delay.
TV Licensing refund guidance, 2026
Refund detailValueSource
Minimum unused time to qualify1 full monthTV Licensing
Value per unused month (2026)£15TV Licensing
Claim window after expiry2 yearsTV Licensing
Typical processing time21 daysTV Licensing

4 What you can still watch after cancelling

Cancelling does not mean the end of UK telly. Every major broadcaster except the BBC offers a free, licence-free catch-up service.

You can keep watching ITVX, Channel 4 and My5 on demand, plus Netflix, Disney Plus and Amazon Prime Video. The only hard limits are live broadcasts and anything on BBC iPlayer, which still need a licence.

Free ITVX account sign-up screen requiring no payment
A free ITVX account is all you need to watch on demand after cancelling: no licence, no card.

One catch if you travel abroad

UK catch-up services are geo-blocked outside the UK, so ITVX, Channel 4 and My5 stop working the moment you leave the country. A VPN with a UK server restores access by routing your connection through a UK IP address.

To be completely clear: a VPN changes where you appear to be, not what the law says. It does not make BBC iPlayer licence-free, so only use it for the on-demand services you are already entitled to watch.

ITVX geo-block error shown outside the UK
The error UK catch-up shows the moment you go abroad, captured on a non-UK connection.
ExpressVPN app connected to a UK server
ExpressVPN on a UK server. This is the setup I use to reach UK catch-up while travelling.
For keeping up with UK catch-up while travelling, ExpressVPN is the option I reach for first, with the most reliable success rate on ITVX and Channel 4.
£8.32/month now £4.99/month
Get ExpressVPN: 30 days free
30-day money-back guarantee. No questions asked.

If you want the same access for less, NordVPN is the better value pick at around £3.39 a month. The table below shows how the two compare against simply going without.

Option From UK catch-up abroad Money-back Our pick
ExpressVPN £4.99/mo Most reliable 30 days Editor’s Pick
NordVPN £3.39/mo Yes 30 days Best value
No VPN £0 Blocked outside UK N/A

5 What happens after you cancel

This is the part that worries people most, so here is the honest version. After you declare no licence is needed, TV Licensing will usually keep an eye on your address.

Expect letters, and possibly a visit from an enquiry officer to confirm your declaration. Around one in five inspected addresses turns out to need a licence, which is why they check.

Knowing your rights makes these visits far less stressful. An enquiry officer has no legal power to enter your home without a search warrant from a magistrate, and you are entitled to refuse entry at the door.

£1,000
The maximum fine for watching live TV or BBC iPlayer without a licence (up to £2,000 in Guernsey), plus costs. If you only ever watch licence-free on-demand services, you are not breaking any law.
TV Licensing, detection and penalties

So the rule that lets you cancel is the same rule that keeps you safe afterwards: no live TV, no iPlayer. Stay the right side of it and a visit is nothing more than a quick conversation at your front door.

If you are curious about how enforcement actually works, our pieces on TV detector vans and the organisation that collects the fee go deeper. For where all this may be heading, see our look at the proposed universal household levy.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it free to cancel a TV licence?
Yes. Cancelling is free and takes about five minutes online. You complete a No Licence Needed declaration confirming nobody at your address watches live TV on any channel or uses BBC iPlayer. If you paid in advance, you may also be owed a refund for the unused months.
Can I get a refund when I cancel my TV licence?
Yes, if your licence has at least one full unused month left. Refunds are calculated in whole months at the 2026 rate of about 15 pounds per month, and you can claim up to two years after the licence expiry date. Approved refunds are paid to your original payment method, usually within 21 days.
What can I watch without a TV licence?
You can legally watch on-demand and catch-up content on ITVX, Channel 4 and My5, plus streaming services like Netflix, Disney Plus and Amazon Prime Video. You cannot watch or record live TV on any channel as it is broadcast, and you cannot use BBC iPlayer for any content, without a licence.
Will TV Licensing still contact me after I cancel?
Often yes. TV Licensing sends letters to unlicensed addresses and may send an enquiry officer to confirm your declaration. Officers have no legal power to enter your home without a search warrant from a magistrate, and you have the right to refuse entry.
Do I need to cancel my Direct Debit separately?
Yes. TV Licensing will not cancel your Direct Debit for you, so cancel it directly with your bank once your declaration is confirmed. This stops any further payments being collected.
Can I be fined for not having a TV licence?
Only if you watch live TV or BBC iPlayer without one. Doing so can lead to a fine of up to 1,000 pounds (up to 2,000 pounds in Guernsey) plus costs, and you would still need to buy a licence. If you only watch licence-free on-demand services, you are not breaking any law.

Methodology

This guide is based on TV Licensing published guidance and the Communications Act 2003, cross-checked against consumer guidance from MoneySavingExpert. Fee figures use the rates that took effect on 1 April 2026. Sources consulted: 11. Sources cited: 8. Research date: June 2026. Update schedule: reviewed when TV Licensing changes its fees or cancellation process. Limitations: rules apply to UK residents; this is general information, not legal advice, and different rules may apply in the Channel Islands and Isle of Man.

Sources

  1. TV Licensing. “TV Licence refund and cancellation.” Accessed June 28, 2026.
  2. TV Licensing. “Request a TV Licence refund.” Accessed June 28, 2026.
  3. TV Licensing. “I no longer watch TV: how to cancel my licence.” Accessed June 28, 2026.
  4. TV Licensing. “Detection and penalties.” Accessed June 28, 2026.
  5. TV Licensing. “You need a TV Licence to watch BBC iPlayer.” Accessed June 28, 2026.
  6. UK Parliament. “Communications Act 2003.” Accessed June 28, 2026.
  7. MoneySavingExpert. “Do I need a TV licence? 20+ TV licence fee tips.” Accessed June 28, 2026.
  8. GOV.UK. “TV Licence: when you need one and how to pay.” Accessed June 28, 2026.

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