What is allowed with IPTV? The line runs along the source. The short answer: using licensed sources is allowed, such as mediatheks, official broadcaster apps and reputable licensed services; using obviously unlicensed offers is not, and redistributing or selling content is never permitted. This page draws the line neutrally and is not legal advice.
Key Takeaways
– Allowed: using licensed sources (mediathek, official app, reputable service).
– Not allowed: knowingly consuming obviously unlicensed content.
– Never permitted: redistributing, sharing or selling content.
– The test: how obvious it is that a source has no licence.
The clear line: allowed vs. not allowed
Let’s break it down. IPTV is neutral; what always matters is whether the content is licensed and what you do with it.
Illustrative image
| Action | Assessment |
|---|---|
| Use the ARD/ZDF mediathek or an official app | allowed |
| Subscribe to a licensed service (MagentaTV, Zattoo, Waipu) | allowed |
| Use a reputable, licensed IPTV subscription | allowed |
| Use an obviously unlicensed “everything-included” offer | not allowed |
| Record content and redistribute or sell it | not permitted |
The rule of thumb: if an offer recognisably can’t have a licence, using it isn’t allowed. If you actively pass content on, it becomes far more serious.
Why the source decides everything
The real question is never the technology, but the origin of the content. That’s exactly what the case law confirms, with details in IPTV copyright rulings.
Quick check: is your use allowed?
- Does the content come from a licensed source?
- Is the price realistic and the provider transparent?
- Are you watching for yourself only, without passing it on?
- Three yeses? Then you’re on the safe side.
For the full picture see is IPTV legal; for the legal routes see legal IPTV alternatives.
Common misconceptions
Several myths persist around IPTV. Three are worth knowing. First: “If I pay, it’s legal.” Wrong, paying an unlicensed service doesn’t make the offer permitted. Second: “A VPN makes everything legal.” Also wrong, it changes nothing about the source. Third: “Only uploading is banned.” Since the 2017 EU Court ruling, knowingly consuming from an obviously illegal source can be an infringement too. Know these three and you’ll judge any offer correctly.
Frequently asked questions
Is using IPTV allowed in general?
Yes, as long as the source is licensed. Mediatheks, official apps and reputable services are allowed. Knowingly consuming obviously unlicensed offers is not. This is not legal advice.
Can I record programmes?
Private recordings from legal sources are permitted within narrow limits. As soon as you pass content on, share or sell it, the line is clearly crossed.
Is a particular app banned?
It’s not the app that decides, but the source. A neutral player is legal; it becomes problematic when an obviously illegal source is played through it.
What about foreign channels?
Licensed international channels via a reputable service are fine. Be cautious with offers that bundle pay-TV content with no recognisable licence.
Conclusion
What’s allowed with IPTV comes down to the source and your behaviour: licensed and for personal use is allowed, obviously unlicensed or redistributed is not. Follow that and you use IPTV safely.
This page is a general overview and not legal advice.
Sources
– Court of Justice of the EU, judgment of 26 April 2017, C-527/15 (Filmspeler), retrieved 2026-06-15, https://curia.europa.eu/
– German Copyright Act (UrhG), Β§Β§ 53, 106, retrieved 2026-06-15, https://www.gesetze-im-internet.de/urhg/
Tags: what is allowed IPTV, IPTV allowed, use IPTV legally, copyright, IPTV rules