If you get this email from Sky there’s bad news for your TV bill

If you use Sky TV it might be worth checking your inbox. The satellite TV company recently revealed that it will be hiking prices by an average of 8.1 percent from April 1 and now those increases are being confirmed with customers finding out just how much extra they will soon pay.

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Sky Q

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Get the award-winning Sky Q set-top box with hundreds of satellite channels, including Sky Atlantic and Sky Sports News, 500 on-demand boxsets from HBO and Peacock, and a Netflix subscription

Contract length: 18-months | Set-up cost: £20

Due to the way in which Sky works out its yearly rises, each customer will face a unique amount being added to their bill. That’s why it’s important to check your emails as this will confirm the exact rise coming this April.

For example, an email seen by Express.co.uk shows one customer facing a hike of £5 extra per month. That is split between Sky Entertainment going up by £2, Sky HD rising by £1 and Sky Sports by £2.

Clearly, the more things you subscribe to the bigger your bill will get come April 1.

Explaining more about its hikes, Sky said: “At Sky, we’re all about bringing you the unmissable entertainment you love. We know that reliability is important. That’s why we continually invest in making our services even better.

“We understand that things are tough right now, and alongside investing in improvements, we’re committed to keeping our prices as low as we can. “The costs of providing services have however increased significantly, and it is affecting the entire industry.”

Sky introduce new streaming TV 'Sky Glass' in 2021

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Although these increases clearly won’t be welcomed by millions of subscribers, Sky isn’t putting things up by as much as some of its rivals.

For example, BT is added a whopping 14.4 percent to bills and Virgin Media is hiking costs by an average of 13.8 percent.

Other firms that announced hikes of over 14 percent include EE, Plusnet, TalkTalk and Shell Energy.

Here are all the increases announced so far by UK TV and broadband firms.

CONFIRMED BROADBAND & TV RISES

BT • 10.5% CPI + 3.9% = 14.4%

EE • 10.5% CPI + 3.9% = 14.4%

Plusnet • 10.5% CPI + 3.9% = 14.4%

Vodafone • 10.5% CPI + 3.9% = 14.4%

TalkTalk • 10.5% CPI + 3.7% = 14.2%

Shell Energy • 10.5% CPI + 3% = 13.5%

Virgin Media • Average 13.8%

Although the Sky price increase is bad news, there is one update that might help soften the blow. The firm has finally added ITVX to Sky Q meaning users can now watch hours of extra content without needing an additional device.

For those not aware, ITVX offers instant access to over 10,000 hours of free catch-up TV, movies and box sets such as Broadchurch, Vera and Love Island.

Movies currently available also include Back to the Future, The Green Mile, Reservoir Dogs and The Aviator.

ITVX, which has now replaced the older ITV Hub platform, is also showing some content exclusively before it is aired on terrestrial television with the promise that new series will be launching online every single week.

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