· Firestick.io Team · News · 9 min read
Roku Strikes Deal to Add FOX One Premium Subscription to The Roku Channel
Roku just added FOX One as a premium subscription inside The Roku Channel at $19.99/month. Here's what the deal actually means for Fire TV users — and how to watch FOX One on your Firestick.
Roku announced on May 26, 2026 that FOX One is now available as a premium subscription inside The Roku Channel — $19.99/month, with a 3-day free trial to kick the tires. It’s a meaningful move for Roku users who want FOX’s news, sports, and entertainment under one login. But if you’re sitting on your couch with a Firestick pointed at your TV, this deal doesn’t do what you might think it does. Roku’s billing wrapper stays inside the Roku ecosystem — it doesn’t travel to Fire TV. Here’s what’s actually happening, what it means for Firestick users, and the fastest way to get FOX One on your Fire TV right now.
Roku’s FOX One deal is Roku-only — the subscription lives inside The Roku Channel and is billed through a Roku account. Fire TV users who want FOX One need to find and install the FOX One app directly from the Fire TV Appstore, or subscribe through FOX’s own website. The Roku integration does not carry over to Firestick.
What the Roku–FOX One Deal Actually Is
Roku added FOX One to its growing list of premium subscriptions inside The Roku Channel — the same hub where you can already subscribe to Starz, Paramount+, and similar add-ons without leaving the Roku interface. FOX One bundles FOX’s content — sports, news, entertainment — into a single subscription at $19.99/month, and the 3-day free trial applies to the monthly plan.
The mechanics are straightforward on Roku’s end: you subscribe through your Roku account, billing is handled by Roku, and you can manage or cancel at my.roku.com. It’s a convenient one-login setup — if you’re on Roku.
The part that matters for this site: playback is restricted to Roku devices, TheRokuChannel.com, and the Roku mobile app. That’s it. Your Firestick 4K Max is not in that list.
What This Means for Fire TV Users
Short version? Not as much as the headline might suggest. Roku is continuing to build out The Roku Channel as a subscription aggregator — similar to what Apple and Amazon have done with their own premium hub systems. For Roku users, that’s genuinely useful. For Fire TV users, FOX is still directing people to the FOX One app directly or to fox.com.
If you want FOX One on your Firestick, the path is the same as it’s always been: the FOX One app on the Fire TV Appstore, or a supported workaround if the app isn’t showing up in your region. The Roku deal doesn’t create a new route to FOX One on Fire TV — and if you subscribe through Roku thinking it’ll work on your Firestick, you’ll be disappointed.
How to Watch FOX One on Firestick
The fastest path to FOX One on your Fire TV is searching the Appstore directly. Here’s how to do it.
How to Get FOX One on Firestick
4 stepsSearch the Fire TV Appstore
From your Firestick home screen, press the Search icon (magnifying glass) and type “FOX One”. Use the on-screen keyboard or hold the microphone button on your Alexa Voice Remote and say “FOX One.”
Install the FOX One App
If the app appears in results, select it and choose Download to install. The app is free to install — you’ll create or sign in to your account inside the app to start a subscription or activate through your TV provider.
Sign In or Subscribe
Open the FOX One app once installed. You can sign in with a TV provider (cable/satellite login) if your provider includes FOX One, or subscribe directly through the app. The monthly plan is $19.99/month with a 3-day free trial.
App Not Showing Up? Try This
If FOX One doesn’t appear in your Fire TV Appstore search, it may be a regional availability issue. Check fox.com in the Fire TV browser as a fallback, or use a VPN to verify your region isn’t being incorrectly detected.
FOX One on Fire TV: What You’re Getting
FOX One App (Direct)
- FOX sports, news, and entertainment in one app
- 3-day free trial on the monthly plan
- TV provider sign-in option if your cable package includes FOX
- Fire TV app available in the Appstore (region-dependent)
✓ Pros
- 3-day free trial lets you test before committing
- TV provider sign-in means you may already have access at no extra cost
- Covers FOX sports, news, and entertainment in one subscription
- Roku's integration shows FOX One is expanding to more platforms
✕ Cons
- Roku's deal does NOT apply to Fire TV — you need the FOX One app separately
- $19.99/month is steep for a single-network app when YouTube TV or Hulu Live TV cost only a bit more
- Regional availability of the Fire TV app isn't guaranteed in all markets
- Subscription confusion is real — subscribing on Roku won't activate on your Firestick
FOX One Alternatives for Firestick Users
If $19.99/month for a single-network subscription feels like too much, these live TV alternatives all work natively on Fire TV and cover FOX content as part of a broader package.
| Service | FOX Content | Fire TV Support | Approx. Price | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🏆 FOX One App | Full FOX package | Yes (app-dependent) | $19.99/mo | FOX-only fans |
| YouTube TV Most Channels | Yes (inc. locals) | Yes | ~$72.99/mo | Broad live TV |
| Hulu + Live TV | Yes (inc. locals) | Yes | ~$82.99/mo | Live TV + on-demand |
| Sling TV | Varies by plan | Yes | From ~$40/mo | Budget live TV |
| Peacock | Some FOX sports events | Yes | From free | Casual sports viewer |
The math here isn’t complicated. If you watch a lot of FOX — NFL games, local news, prime-time shows — and you don’t need 70+ other channels, $19.99/month for FOX One makes sense. If you’re cutting cable and want a broader replacement, YouTube TV or Hulu + Live TV will cost more but cover FOX as part of a full bundle.
For sports specifically, check out our best sports streaming apps for Firestick — there are a few options in there that cover FOX Sports content without requiring a FOX One subscription.
The Bigger Picture: Roku’s Premium Subscription Push
Roku adding FOX One to The Roku Channel is part of a broader trend. Roku, Amazon, and Apple are all racing to become the primary billing layer for streaming subscriptions — the hub where you manage everything rather than juggling separate apps and accounts.
For Roku users, this is genuinely convenient. For everyone else, it’s a reminder that these ecosystems don’t talk to each other. A Roku subscription stays on Roku. An Apple TV Channel stays on Apple. Your Firestick’s Amazon subscription stays in Amazon’s world.
The practical takeaway for Fire TV: check whether your TV provider already includes FOX One at no extra cost before paying $19.99/month. A lot of cable and satellite packages still carry FOX, which means you might be able to sign into the FOX One app for free using your TV provider credentials.
If you’re navigating the broader landscape of what’s available on Fire TV — and what’s quietly disappearing — our Amazon Fire TV 2026 update guide has the rundown on what changed and why some apps are harder to find than they used to be.
And if you want the full picture on live TV options for cord cutters, the best Firestick apps for live TV guide covers everything from the big bundles down to the free options.
Get the Most Out of FOX One on Fire TV
If you’re set on FOX One, use Surfshark on your Firestick. Not just for unlocking regional availability — once you’re set up, a VPN protects everything you stream and stops your ISP from throttling your connection during peak hours. FOX One streams live sports and news, which is exactly the kind of traffic ISPs love to throttle.
Get Surfshark — 86% Off + 3 Months Free
→For live TV that covers more than just FOX, Unify IPTV is worth a look — it’s a fully-loaded IPTV service that works on Fire TV and covers sports, news, and international channels that single-network apps can’t touch.
Check Out Unify IPTV
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Last updated: May 2026