Sky TV customers in the U.K. and Ireland will soon have another way to access Disney+. Ironically, it’s a return to the very thing many cord-cutters hoped to escape through streaming. Thanks to a multi-year deal with Disney+, Netflix, HBO Max, and Hayu, those services will now be included in the broadcaster’s £24-a-month Ultimate TV package.
Basically, it would be like Comcast’s XFinity giving U.S. customers Disney+ as part of a cable package. At the peak of cord-cutting enthusiasm, this would have been unthinkable. What once would have seemed like a contradiction now looks like a business necessity.

The logo for Disney+ – YouTube, Disney+
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The deal signals a surprising trend—streaming isn’t replacing cable, and is instead being absorbed back into the older media ecosystem. It suggests convenience may be winning over ideology. As audiences look to consolidate costs, or simply avoid managing multiple subscriptions, Sky TV may get customers to un-cut the cord.
Sky executives are framing the agreement as a breakthrough in convenience rather than a return to the past.
The Rebundling Era
Sophia Ahmad, Sky’s chief consumer officer, said, “In a world-first, we’re bringing together Sky, Netflix, Disney+, HBO Max and Hayu into a single Sky TV subscription.” She added that having streaming services integrated into Sky TV will allow customers to “jump from show to show with ease.” One feature of the integration is that Sky TV and Disney+ programming will be promoted side by side and will share space on the Continue Watching rail.
The deal, which goes into effect March 2026, gives Sky TV customers Disney+ Standard with Ads. Disney said in a press release that “Sky Cinema subscribers will also get exclusive access to a new Disney+ Cinema linear channel, providing a taste of the movies available on Disney+.”

Moana in Moana (2016), Walt Disney Studios
Notably, Disney+ and the other streamers are not add-ons—they are being included as part of one of Sky TV’s existing bundles. Disney+ has also made it possible for existing customers to move their existing accounts and profiles to Sky TV. While a multi-year agreement with a traditional pay-TV provider may seem like a step backward for a streaming service, it could help reduce churn — the cycle in which consumers cancel and resubscribe as content rotates between platforms.
The deal marks the latest turn in a decade-long evolution of how television is packaged and sold.
Business Strategy
For years, streaming services were positioned as the antidote to cable, offering a cheaper, more flexible alternative to often bloated package deals. Companies like Disney rushed to launch their own platforms in an effort to bypass traditional carriage agreements and go directly to consumers, investing heavily in services like Disney+.

Bob Iger via New York Times Events YouTube
Subscriber growth in the U.S., however, has slowed since 2022. If that trend reflects broader global patterns, placing Disney+ inside a Sky TV bundle is less a retreat than a recalibration. Bundling expands distribution, stabilizes subscriber numbers, and reduces churn.
Ultimately, consumer behavior may be driving this evolution. Audiences appear more concerned with convenience and accessibility at a reasonable cost than with the ideological freedom once associated with cord-cutting. The promise of streaming was freedom from the bundle. Its next phase may be the reinvention of one.
Do you think streaming will move back to cable? Let us know in the comments!

