Bunnystream advertises 60,000+ live channels – the highest headline figure of any provider we have reviewed. It also includes no IP lock and catch-up TV as standard, features that cost extra or are unavailable at several competitors. The monthly price starts at $15 and the annual single connection plan comes in at $70. That combination of features and pricing is worth examining properly.
The 60,000 Channel Claim
The first thing to address is what 60,000+ channels actually means in practice. Every IPTV provider in this category overstates channel counts to some degree – duplicate streams, low-quality feeds, inactive channels, and regional variants of the same network all inflate the number. The meaningful test is not the headline figure but whether the specific channels you want to watch are available and stream reliably.
That said, 60,000+ is significantly higher than most alternatives we have reviewed (Krooz TV claims 30,000+, Double Click TV 28,000+, Tivistation 23,000+). Even discounting for inflation, a larger library means more coverage of regional, international, and niche channels that smaller providers may not carry. If you watch content from less mainstream regions or want comprehensive international coverage, the channel depth is worth testing during the trial.
No IP Lock and Catch-Up TV
These two features set Bunnystream apart from several alternatives at the same price point.
No IP lock means you can use your subscription from any network without updating a registered IP address. Travel with your Firestick, switch from home broadband to mobile data, log in from a different location – all without contacting support. This is the same policy offered by Voco TV and Sora IPTV, and it matters most for subscribers who do not always watch from the same place.
Catch-up TV allows you to watch previously aired content from supported channels without recording it in advance. Availability varies by channel – not all 60,000+ support it – but having it included at no extra cost and at this price point is a genuine addition. Several competitors do not offer catch-up at any tier.
The Pricing
The 1-month plan is $15 – standard for this category. The 3-month plan is notably cheap at $30 ($10/month), making it one of the most affordable 3-month options in our reviewed set. The 12-month single connection plan at $70 matches Worthystream’s annual rate and undercuts Krooz TV ($85), Tivistation (~$95), and Double Click TV ($100).
Multi-connection pricing is less competitive. At 3+ connections the annual cost is higher than Krooz TV and Double Click TV. Bunnystream is better value for 1-2 connection subscribers than larger households.
The Trade-offs
The 3-day refund window is the main practical concern. Three days is not enough time to properly evaluate an IPTV service across different viewing conditions – you get roughly one weekend. The 12-hour free trial (4 hours on weekends) gives you a preliminary check, and a paid 48-hour trial at €4.99 (deducted from your subscription cost if you proceed) gives more room. Plan your trial around the content you actually care about – if sports is the priority, start the trial before a Saturday morning so you have a full day of live sport to test.
Account activation takes between 30 minutes and 3 hours, which is longer than some services that activate within minutes. Factor this in when planning your trial.
Who It Suits
Bunnystream makes the most sense for subscribers who want a large channel library including international content, value the no IP lock flexibility, and watch enough to benefit from catch-up TV. At $70/year for a single connection it is well priced for the feature set. Test the trial carefully given the short refund window, and if the content library and stability meet your needs it is a strong value option.
