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Apple TV now offers free 4K upgrades for about 50 purchased TV series, extending its movie‑upgrade policy and boosting the value of its catalog.
Apple has begun automatically upgrading purchases of roughly 50 TV series to 4K at no extra cost, expanding the free‑upgrade perk it first offered for movies in 2017 [1]. The move gives existing buyers higher‑resolution versions without repurchasing, a benefit that could make the Apple TV Store more attractive to new and returning customers.
| At a glance | |
|---|---|
| Eligible titles | ~50 TV series |
| Upgrade type | 4K (standard dynamic range) |
| First rollout | Includes dramas, documentaries, reality, kids |
| Prior policy | Free 4K upgrades for movies since 2017 [1] |
The initial list, compiled by Apple TV researcher Sigmund Judge, spans a mix of genres—from “Mad Men” (seasons 1‑7) to “Star Trek: Strange New Worlds” (season 1) and “RuPaul’s Drag Race UK” (season 5) [1]. All upgraded versions are currently delivered in SDR rather than HDR or Dolby Vision, and the 4K badge appears on the Apple TV Store page for at least one title, confirming the upgrade is live [1]. The catalog is not uniform across regions; some shows may be missing or limited to certain seasons, as noted by iDrop News [2].
Apple’s free‑upgrade policy for movies launched with the original Apple TV 4K in 2017, later adding Dolby Vision, Dolby Atmos, and HDR10+ as those formats became available [1][3]. The TV‑show upgrade mirrors that model: users who bought an HD version should automatically receive the 4K version once the studio makes it available, without needing to repurchase [2]. However, the upgrade is still streaming‑only—no local 4K downloads are supported, and playback requires newer hardware (Apple‑silicon Macs, Intel Macs with T2 chips, or recent set‑top boxes) [2].
Extending free 4K upgrades to TV shows strengthens one of Apple TV’s unique selling points—long‑term value for purchased content. Competitors such as Amazon Prime Video and Disney+ generally charge extra for higher‑resolution versions or bundle them into premium tiers, so Apple’s approach could sway cost‑conscious buyers toward its storefront [3]. The limited rollout, however, means the advantage is currently confined to a niche set of titles, and Apple has not disclosed how it will select future series or whether HDR upgrades will follow [1][2].
Apple’s decision to apply its free‑upgrade model to TV shows signals a broader commitment to enhancing the long‑term value of its purchased‑content ecosystem, but the pace and breadth of future upgrades will determine how significant a competitive edge it becomes.
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AI-assisted synthesis by the TrendWatcher Editorial Desk · sourced from 3 outlets · Jul 8, 2026 · How we report
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