Streaming fragmentation has been pulling wallets apart for years, so a little consolidation always feels like good news. As of today, Peacock subscribers can bolt Starz onto their existing plan and watch everything inside a single app — no second login, no separate billing headache.
The add-on costs $12 per month, layered on top of whatever Peacock tier you already pay for. And it’s not gated behind the priciest plan: anyone on Select, Premium or Premium Plus is eligible to sign up. That’s a broad net, which makes this less of a premium upsell and more of a genuine option for casual subscribers.
The practical upside is that all Starz programming streams through the Peacock app itself. You won’t be bouncing between interfaces or juggling two watchlists — Starz content lives where your NBCUniversal viewing already happens.
So what are you actually paying for? Starz brings a deep bench of long-running, fan-favorite series. The crime-saga universe of “Power” — with its sprawling web of spinoffs — anchors the lineup, alongside the time-traveling romance epic “Outlander”, which has built one of the most devoted audiences in premium TV. These aren’t filler titles; they’re the kind of shows people subscribe specifically to watch.
For now, the integration is functional rather than fancy. You sign up, you get access, you watch. The slicker discovery experience is coming a little later: Peacock plans to roll out dedicated rails for Starz-specific movies and TV shows within the app later this year. That should make browsing the combined catalog feel more intentional, rather than leaving Starz titles buried in the general feed.
Why does this matter beyond convenience? Add-on partnerships like this one are quietly reshaping how streaming gets sold. Instead of asking viewers to maintain a growing pile of standalone apps, platforms are increasingly acting as hubs that resell rival catalogs. For Starz, it’s exposure to Peacock’s substantial subscriber base. For Peacock, it’s a richer library without the cost of producing all that content in-house. And for viewers, it’s one fewer app to install — and one fewer password to forget.
The math is straightforward: if you were already eyeing a standalone Starz subscription and you happen to live in Peacock most evenings, folding the two together for $12 a month removes a layer of friction. Whether that price feels fair depends entirely on how much “Power” and “Outlander” mean to your queue — but the option, at least, is now live for the vast majority of Peacock accounts.