Satellite Digital satellite television has been officially available in Germany since 1996. Prior to May 2012, most of the 30+ television stations broadcast their
satellite signal using both analogue and digital (DVB-S); however, all analogue satellite broadcasts ceased on 30 April 2012. There is currently a single pay television satellite operator in Germany -
Sky Deutschland. Prior to being known as Sky, the service was named Premiere; it (along with its former owner
Leo Kirch) got into serious financial trouble due to its early and proprietary usage of encryption (Betacrypt, D-box). Subsequently, Premiere was bought by
News Corporation and renamed Sky, in keeping with their satellite services elsewhere in Europe (
Sky (UK and Ireland) and
Sky Italia). ;HDTV via satellite In late 2004 German channel group
ProSieben showed a
BBC documentary and a self-produced television movie in
1080i via
MPEG-2 DVB-S, followed by the Hollywood films
Spider-Man and
Men in Black II in March 2005. These were intended to be a test for future commercial HD services. Regular
free to air broadcast of the HD versions of
ProSieben and
Sat.1 began on 26 October 2005. Unlike the test broadcasts,
DVB-S2 and
MPEG-4 AVC were used. Both ProSieben HD and Sat.1 HD ceased their unencrypted broadcasts in 2008; encrypted HD broadcasting of both channels resumed under the
HD+ brand (which also included other commercial channels; see below) in January 2010. Premiere, after several delays, started broadcasting three HD channels — one each dedicated to
films,
sports and
documentaries — in November 2005, although there were virtually no suitable, certified receivers available on the market. The content was also sparse and thus often repeated. Sky (formerly Premiere) reuses its proprietary
digital rights management system embedded into its content scrambling system (
Nagravision) from SD broadcasts to block analogue output of the movie channel from the receiving
set-top box altogether, only allowing
HDCP-secured transmissions; the other channels are less restricted. On 1 November 2009, the premium
HD+ service launched with two channels, RTL HD and Vox HD, with Sat.1 HD, ProSieben HD and
Kabel eins HD joining the service in January 2010. DSF HD (now called Sport1 HD) began test broadcasts in August 2010 and launched fully on HD+ on 1 November 2010, followed by Sixx HD and RTL2 HD on 1 December 2010. In June 2011, Comedy Central HD, Nickelodeon HD and N24 HD joined service, bringing the number of channels offered to 11. In April 2011, HD+ became available to Sky Deutschland subscribers without the need for an HD+
CAM and viewing card (although an additional subscription is still required). Currently (as of May 2012) all satellite HDTV channels are broadcast using the
h.264 codec. As of July 2014, most material is upscaled SD content. ;Free-to-air HDTV via satellite Prior to 30 April 2012 there were eight free-to-air HDTV channels originating in Germany broadcast via satellite: Das Erste HD, ZDF HD, Arte HD, Anixe HD, EinsFestival HD,
sonnenklar.TV HD, QVC HD and HSE24 HD. After 30 April 2012, when all analogue satellite broadcasts ceased, ten additional FTA HD channels became available (all of which are
public service channels):
Phoenix HD,
NDR HD,
WDR HD,
BR HD,
SWR HD,
ZDFneo HD,
ZDFinfo HD,
ZDFkultur HD,
3sat HD and
KiKa HD. From December 2013 on all PSB channels except
ARD-alpha,
SR Fernsehen and
Radio Bremen TV are available in HD.
Cable DVB-C transmission started in 2004 with
pay television Premiere and digital versions of the analogue channels. The rather late changeover to DVB was caused both by the long process of selling the infrastructure of former monopolist
Deutsche Telekom to others and the fact that the cable network ends at the curb or property, with the in-house cable in large apartment buildings being operated by a different company. Due to this, the new owners of Deutsche Telekom's cable network were in many cases not able to offer new products directly to the viewer. By 2006, there were three major cable operators, Unity Media in
Hesse,
North Rhine-Westphalia and
Baden-Württemberg and by far the largest,
Kabel Deutschland in the other 13 states. Today, all companies offer about 200 television channels by DVB-C, which includes some 70 channels at no extra charge as well as a number of
pay-per-view offers and subscription-based packages (like the HD-broadcasts of privately owned channels, comparable to HD+ on satellite). In addition to that pay television broadcaster
Sky Deutschland is also available. In some very large apartment complexes a number of local and national companies operate an in-house cable network which is fed solely by its own satellite antenna on the building, not the local cable operator. The satellite channels are either transcoded into analogue transmission, receivable by any television set without extra equipment, or into DVB-C. As of 2014, still 17.2% of Germany transmits television with analogue cable signals, compared to 29.1% of digital cable; this similar to the situation in the
Netherlands,
Sweden and
Belgium, where analogue cable is also still widely used.
Terrestrial Terrestrial reception had lost most of its users by the 1990s due to extensive cable and satellite coverage. In a two step process analogue terrestrial television broadcasting in the states of
Berlin and
Brandenburg was switched off in 2003 and replaced by
DVB-T, in 2005, about two-thirds of Germany's states began to replace analogue transmission. By 2006, all metropolitan and most rural areas had moved to digital transmission. Today, only foreign army bases and some local television stations still broadcast on analogue. While the public broadcasters
ARD and
ZDF transmit throughout Germany, commercial stations often are only available within metropolitan areas, so the number of available channels varies between about 10 and 30. All DVB-T1 channels were
free-to-air and the broadcasters rented transmission services directly from a transmitter operator, usually
Media Broadcast. ARD stations also use their own transmitters. In June 2016, a gradual switch-over from
DVB-T with
MPEG-2 encoding to
DVB-T2 with
HEVC encoding has commenced. The first phase included one new multiplex broadcasting six channels in selected urban areas, in addition to the old DVB-T standard. The DVB-T2 channels are broadcasting in 1080p50. The commercial channels are encrypted and part of the "Freenet TV"-Package. The final switch-over to DVB-T2 occurred in steps, starting with major metropolitan areas who switched on 29 March 2017. The last transmitter is planned to switch in 2019. ==Series==