List of channels Depending on the service provider, Starz provides up to twelve multiplex channels – six 24-hour multiplex channels, all of which are
simulcast in both
standard definition and
high definition – as well as a
subscription video-on-demand service (Starz On Demand). Starz broadcasts its primary and multiplex channels on Eastern and
Pacific Time Zone schedules. The respective coastal feeds of each channel are usually packaged together (though most cable providers only offer the East and West Coast feeds of the main Starz channel), resulting in the
difference in local airtimes for a particular movie or program between two geographic locations being three hours at most. The premium film services Encore and MoviePlex, which are also owned by Starz, Inc., operate as separate services; as such, subscribers to one of the services do not have to subscribe to any of the others. Some providers offer Encore and MoviePlex's multiplex channels on a separate digital cable tier from Starz. However, Encore and, depending on its carriage, MoviePlex are frequently sold together in a package with Starz.
Background In 1994, Encore launched the pay television industry's first "themed" multiplex service – seven additional movie channels that each focused on a specific genre. This was intended to include only six channels, but Encore decided to launch Starz as a competitor to Warner's HBO and Viacom's Showtime after it acquired the pay-TV rights to broadcast films by Universal Studios released after 1993. This was followed in 1997 by the debut of a joint venture with
BET Networks called BET Movies: Starz! 3. Two additional multiplex channels began operations in May 1999. Starz! Family carried family-oriented
theatrical and
home video film releases, was launched possibly in response to HBO's own family-oriented multiplex channel, HBO Family, which launched three years earlier, but closed down in Summer 2025. The other service was Starz! Cinema, a channel featuring critically acclaimed independent films and movies outside the mainstream cinema. Starz! 2 was also renamed Starz! Theater to better reflect its format. The first changes made following the original rollout of the multiplex occurred in 2001, with the rebranding of BET Movies: Starz! as Black Starz! after BET withdrew from the partnership during its acquisition by Viacom (which owned rival pay-TV service Showtime at the time) in 2001. A seventh Starz multiplex channel was launched in 2004: Starz! Kids was created as a movie service featuring films aimed at children between 2 and 11 years of age, maintaining a format similar to that of Starz! Family. Unlike the other Starz multiplex channels, Starz! Kids was launched on cable systems on a case-by-case basis instead of on a broader national scale. The entire multiplex was overhauled on March 28, 2005, as part of an extensive rebranding of the Starz and Encore services. While Encore debuted a slightly modified logo and applied the "Encore" brand to the names of its six multiplex channels, Starz underwent a more dramatic makeover, with a completely redesigned logo – which included the
exclamation mark being dropped from the channel's name – and a standardized graphics package that was implemented across all of its channels (with some modifications for each channel's format). The programming formats of several channels changed entirely: Starz! Theater was relaunched as Starz Edge, a movie channel aimed primarily at men 18 to 34 years old (nicknamed "The New Generation" by the channel). Starz! Kids and Starz! Family were combined into a single channel called Starz Kids and Family, to make room for a new channel focusing on comedic feature films called Starz Comedy. Black Starz! also changed its name to Starz InBlack. The only multiplex channel (other than the primary feed) that retained its original name was Starz Cinema. The Starz multiplex has been marketed under several names over the years including the "Starz Encore Super Pak" and the "Starz Super Pak". The multiplex now has no "official" marketed name . On March 28, 2016, Starz introduced a new logo and tagline, "Obsessable". This coincided with a revamp of the Starz channels effective April 5 of that year, with all of Encore's channels taking on the "Starz" brand, and Encore's main channel being rebranded "Starz Encore", and airing reruns of Starz originals in addition to films. Starz now has 14 channels in its package.
Other services Starz HD Starz HD is a high-definition simulcast feed of Starz that broadcasts in the
1080i resolution format. In addition to its main channel, Starz also operates high-definition simulcast feeds of its five multiplex channels. When it was launched in December 2003, the simulcast covered only the East and West Coast feeds of the main Starz channel. An
enhanced-definition simulcast feed and a separate HD channel called Sharper Movies HD, that would have broadcast in the 1080i format and be structured similarly to the original format of sister channel Encore's MoviePlex (in which Sharper Movies would broadcast programming from each Starz channel in daily sampler blocks), were also planned. Plans for the latter service were dropped because of a lack of interest from providers to charge a premium fee for the network. HD feeds of Starz Kids and Family, Starz Comedy and Starz Edge, followed in 2007. The remaining Starz multiplex channels, Starz Cinema and Starz In Black, launched their HD simulcast feeds on June 23, 2010, with
DirecTV becoming the first provider to offer all six channels (including both coastal feeds of the primary Starz channel) in HD. Among others, Starz HD is carried nationally by satellite providers: DirecTV and
Dish Network and regionally by digital cable:
Verizon FiOS,
AT&T U-verse,
Comcast Xfinity,
Time Warner Cable, Cox Communications,
Cablevision and
Charter Communications.
Starz On Demand Starz operates a video-on-demand (VOD) television service called Starz On Demand, which is available at no additional charge to new and existing Starz subscribers. The service was launched on September 19, 2001, debuting on
Adelphia Communications'
Cleveland, Ohio, system. The service offers early premieres of feature films that are scheduled to premiere on Starz, up to one month prior to their pay cable debut on the primary linear channel. Starz on Demand's rotating program selection incorporates selected new titles that are added each Friday, and existing program titles held over from the previous one to two weeks. The Starz On Demand name was also used for an online broadband streaming movie service operated by Starz and
RealNetworks from 2003 to 2004. In March 2011, Starz On Demand launched a third VOD service (in addition to its standard-definition and high-definition VOD services), offering movies presented in
3D to customers of Comcast and Verizon FiOS at no additional charge.
Starzplay (U.S.) The original incarnation of Starzplay was a website and
mobile app that featured original programming and feature film content from Starz available for streaming in standard or high definition. It was available to Starz subscribers of Verizon FIOS, AT&T U-verse, Cox Communications, Xfinity by Comcast and DirecTV until it was merged with Starz.com on April 5, 2016. The former incarnation of the Starzplay online service (which is structured as a
TV Everywhere-style service) was launched on October 8, 2012, with the release of the
iPad,
iPhone and
iPod Touch app until they were merged with Starz.com on April 5, 2016. The Starzplay name was borrowed from a prior service offered in conjunction with
Netflix. It was created in 2008 after the subscription streaming service struck an agreement with Starz Entertainment to allow Netflix to sub-license rights to films from distributors that maintain output deals with the linear Starz channel for online viewing – in lieu of acquiring the digital distribution rights on its own, due to the expense of acquiring newer film titles – as Netflix was considered to be merely a "content aggregator". Because Netflix chose to sub-license digital rights through Starz instead of negotiating with the studios,
Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures threatened not to renew its output deal with Starz unless it either discontinued its deal with Netflix or paid Disney a licensing fee for digital streaming rights to its films (Netflix ended up assuming rights to most film releases by Walt Disney Studios from Starz in 2016). Starzplay (as a Netflix service) was first made available to Starz subscribers of the Verizon FiOS television service. Starz content (including most of its original programming and series content that the channel acquired through domestic and foreign distributors) was made available on Netflix's "Watch Instantly" platform. It was the third subscription video-on-demand online streaming service operated by Starz: Starz Ticket operated from 2004 to 2006, under a joint venture between Starz Entertainment and RealNetworks. Starz launched Vongo, a separate online movie service for subscribers, which operated from 2006 until it was discontinued on September 30, 2008. On September 1, 2011, Starz announced that it would not renew its streaming agreement with Netflix, which ended on February 28, 2012; movie titles that are available on DVD from
Sony Pictures, Disney and other studios that maintain pay-TV distribution deals with Starz were not affected and can be acquired from Netflix by this method. With the expiration of the Netflix deal, film content from studios with which Starz maintains broadcast rights were no longer available for online streaming, particularly as Netflix and certain similar services such as
Vudu did not have separate streaming rights to films from these individual studios. Prior to the beta launch of its Starz Online service (which became Starzplay upon its official launch), Starz announced on November 18, 2011, that it was developing a streaming application for mobile devices, allowing the network's subscribers – and in early reports, speculation that possibly non-subscription television subscribers would be allowed as well – to view Starz's series and film content. The app was released on October 9, 2012, for Apple's iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch, and on May 7, 2013, for
Android devices. An app for authenticated subscribers for the
Xbox 360 was released on December 3, 2013, followed by a similar app for the
Xbox One on August 5, 2014.
Lionsgate+ Lionsgate+ (previously Starzplay), Starzplay Arabia, and Lionsgate Play (in the South and Southeast Asia region) were Starz's international streaming services for viewers outside North America. Starzplay Arabia was the first Starz-branded service to be localized outside the United States, launching on April 2, 2015, in 17 countries in the
Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, breaching those territories before its biggest competitor in media streaming being Netflix. Starzplay Arabia remains available even as the U.S. version of the service has been discontinued. In 2018, the service became available in
Pakistan, as a joint venture between Cinepax, a cinema chain in Pakistan, and
Lionsgate's StarzPlay Arabia. In 2019, Starzplay was launched in
Brazil and Europe (
France,
Germany,
Ireland,
Spain and the
United Kingdom). In 2020, it became available in
Argentina,
Chile, and
Italy. In March 2022, a 57% majority stake in Starzplay Arabia was acquired by a consortium, led by
e& (formerly known as Etisalat) and the
Abu Dhabi-based investment group
ADQ. The deal was valued at $420m. In January 2021, Starzplay Arabia signed a deal with Abu Dhabi Media, which allows subscribers to watch UFC fights and events live. In several countries, Lionsgate+ is provided through partnerships with cable services, such as
Vodafone in Spain,
Movistar TV in Argentina,
IndiHome in Indonesia and
PLDT Home in the Philippines or within
Apple TV as well. In November 2022, it was announced that Lionsgate+ was ending operations in the markets of France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Benelux, the Nordics, and Japan before the end of the company's fiscal year. In August 2023, Lionsgate announced that Lionsgate+ would leave Latin America on December 31, 2023. In November, the shutdown date was changed to December 11, 2023, while customers who have accessed Lionsgate+ through Amazon Prime Video would have continued to access streaming until February 9, 2024. On November 4, 2023, Lionsgate announced that Lionsgate+ would cease its operations in the UK in early 2024. On December 19, it was confirmed that the shutdown date would be on February 29, 2024. On November 14, 2024, Lionsgate+ became available in New Zealand as an add-on subscription via
Amazon Prime Video. On January 13, 2026, Lionsgate sold Lionsgate Play's Indian and Southeast Asian operations to the streaming service's president Rohit Jain for an undisclosed sum. As part of the transaction, Jain left Lionsgate and secured a multi-year licensing agreement to use the Lionsgate name for the service as well as access to catalog content for the streamer. On April 9, 2026, Lionsgate+ became available in the United States as an add-on subscription via Amazon Prime Video.
Starz app and subscription service On April 5, 2016, Starz launched a new app and over-the-top subscription service to compete with
HBO Now and
Showtime's OTT subscription service. The new app, which replaced the StarzPlay service, allowed users to access Starz programming regardless of whether they had a TV package or not. The Starz app also includes offline playback functionality, allowing users to download and watch content without an internet connection. While the new STARZ app caters mostly to the North America users, the STARZ ON app (formerly STARZPLAY) is primarily focused towards the Middle East & North Africa (MENA) region. Starz ON has a varied library of original content, with live streaming capabilities. STARZPLAY stands out as the premium live-streaming service for movies, TV shows and live sports (cricket, football & more) in the MENA region; with more than 3 million subscribers, mainly from Saudi Arabia & the United Arab Emirates. In response to the discontinuation of StarzPlay,
Comcast has blocked access to the new Starz app for
Comcast Xfinity customers, forcing them to instead access the network's authenticated content through the Xfinity app and website and older StarzPlay apps on platforms such as
Roku. Currently, Comcast is the only major distributor to do this.
Starz on Amazon Video In the winter of 2015, Amazon Video began offering Starz and rival premium network Showtime as add-on subscriptions for their customers; the cost is $8.99 per month, after a seven-day free trial. The content deal between Amazon and Starz not only offers the channel's current and back catalog of programming, but also movies and classic TV series currently airing on Encore and its branded networks, as well as live East Coast feeds of the Starz-branded networks and Encore. ==Programming==