UKTV's channels are available via satellite and cable in
Ireland and the
United Kingdom. In the UK, on digital terrestrial television,
U&Yesterday,
U&Dave,
U&Drama,
U&W and
U&Eden are available on the Freeview platform. Selected parts of
U&Gold,
Home and
Good Food were available through the now defunct Top Up TV service. The logo on the UKTV branded channels has also now been replaced by a new design.
Current free-to-air channels UKTV's
free-to-air channels are available on all platforms.
U&Dave U&Dave is a comedy-oriented entertainment channel. The channel originally came together after UK Gold 2, an evening timeshift service of UK Gold, was reinvented to aim towards a more younger audience and was relaunched as UK G2 on 12 November 2003, becoming the more "edgy and contemporary" counterpart to UK Gold. As with its predecessor, UKG2 only broadcast at night, from It later rebranded as UKTV G2 in March 2004, and soon expanded its hours to the daytime as well. On 15 October 2007, UKTV G2 rebranded as Dave, becoming the first in the network not to use UKTV or any UK branding. UKTV said the name of the channel was chosen because "everyone knows a bloke called Dave". The rebrand included the channel being available free-to-air on
Freeview, replacing
UKTV Bright Ideas which only averaged a 0.1% audience share. The move to Freeview saw Dave launch in the bandwidth previously used by
Yesterday (previously known as UKTV History). In October 2017, Dave briefly rebranded to
Rupert as part of a commercial partnership with Snickers. On 16 July 2024, Dave was renamed
U&Dave. U&Dave currently broadcasts on channel19 on Freeview and channel157 on Freesat.
U&Drama Launched on 8 July 2013,
U&Drama focuses itself as a home for British dramas from the last 40years. The channel became the fourth channel to launch on Freeview, after Yesterday, Dave and Really. On 16 July 2024, Drama was renamed
U&Drama. U&Drama currently broadcasts on channel20 on Freeview and channel158 on Freesat.
U&W U&W is a general entertainment channel, and the flagship channel. The channel launched as Watch on From launch until 2010, the channel's mascot was Blinky the eyeball, who was seen on the idents, logo, and website. A 2012 rebrand saw smoke, hairballs, crystals and liquid flying out of the logo. The channel was later rebranded as W in February 2016. In February 2022,
Broadcast magazine reported that the channel will become a free channel to air in the spring, joining stablemates Dave, Yesterday and Drama as a Freeview service. In March 2022, this was confirmed by UKTV with the channel due to be launched on Freeview channel25 from 28 March 2022. UKTV said that this female skewing channel would be still targeted at a 25 to 44 age range but introduced a new logo for the free-to-air era, which included the letter W in a slanted rectangle. On 16 July 2024, W was renamed
U&W. U&W currently broadcasts on channel25 on Freeview and channel156 on Freesat.
U&Yesterday U&Yesterday focuses on history and archive programmes. It originally launched on as UK History, as part of the launch of Freeview, and was broadcast on the same EPG bandwidth that formerly housed Play UK. The channel rebranded as UKTV History in March 2004. Hours on Freeview were cut when Dave launched, with transmissions finishing at 6pm, but were restored on 1 June 2010. The channel relaunched as Yesterday in March 2009. Yesterday's main focus is (as of May 2024) on programmes with historical topics and biographies, nature and wildlife, some comedy, and some historical fact drama series, often from the BBC archives. On 16 July 2024, Yesterday was renamed
U&Yesterday. U&Yesterday currently broadcasts on channel27 on Freeview and channel159 on Freesat.
U&Eden U&Eden focuses on documentaries and factual programming. The channel launched on 8 March 2004 as UKTV Documentary, as a two-way split from UK Horizons (the other being the defunct UKTV People (Blighty). The channel originally aired natural history documentaries such as Planet Earth, but mid2024 saw its output also start to cover other factual and reality programming although natural history programming is still part of the channel's output. On 16 October 2024, Eden was renamed
U&Eden and became a free-to-air channel.
Current pay-TV channels UKTV's pay-TV channels are available on Sky and Virgin Media, but not Freeview or Freesat.
U&Gold U&Gold focuses on comedy and was, until 2008, the flagship channel of the UKTV network. It launched on as UK Gold, making it the oldest channel of the network as well. UK Gold originally operated as a joint venture between
Thames Television and
BBC Enterprises to show
reruns of their archive programming. Within the launch of the UKTV network and as the years went on, the output of UK Gold (renamed UKTV Gold in 2004) was mainly British comedy programmes and sometimes feature-length films. These are a combination of internally produced shows and repeats of shows from the BBC and ITV archives. In recent years, original programmes have aired on the channel and the American version of
Dancing with the Stars has had its first UK airing on the channel. UKTV Gold was relaunched as GOLD (Go On Laugh Daily) on the morning of as it transitioned exclusively to comedy programmes, with the entertainment programming moving to Watch (U&W). The channel rebranded again to simply Gold in 2010. The channel rebranded to
U&Gold on 7 November 2024.
U&Alibi U&Alibi focuses on crime drama and suspense thrillers. It originally launched as a rebranding of UK Arena as UK Drama in March 2000, focusing on all kinds of drama programmes. It rebranded as UKTV Drama in March 2004, and on 2 May 2006, a new timeshift service called UKTV Drama +1 was launched, to replace UKTV People's timeshift channel. (UKTV People +1) It was relaunched as Alibi on the morning of 7 October 2008 and is now fully focused on crime dramas which are mainly taken from the BBC and ITV archives. The channel was named
U&Alibi on 7 November 2024.
Catch-up service In June 2014, UKTV announced a
catch-up service, UKTV Play. It launched on iOS in August, on PC,
YouView and
Virgin Media in November, on
Android devices in February 2015 and on
Freesat in September 2018. The interactive service features content from the channels Dave, Yesterday, W, and Drama. In addition to UKTV Play, some of the networks also have catch-up services. Catch-up services for
Watch,
Gold, Dave and Alibi were launched on Sky Go in October 2013, alongside all UKTV channels launching on Eircom's eVision TV service and Gold launching on Now TV. The following month, all channels appeared on Virgin TV Anywhere. In November 2023, UKTV announced that UKTV Play would be renamed
U as a part of a
rebrand of the UKTV network. UKTV Play rebranded to
U on 16 July 2024.
FAST channels On 24 August 2023, UKTV launched four
FAST channels on
Samsung TV Plus and
Pluto TV: UKTV Play Uncovered, UKTV Play Heroes, UKTV Play Laughs and UKTV Play Full Throttle. Due to the "U" masterbrand in 2024, UKTV Play Uncovered, UKTV Play Heroes, UKTV Play Laughs and UKTV Play Full Throttle have been renamed U&The Past, U&Real Heroes, U&Laughs and U&Transport, respectively.
Former channels UKTV has also had many former channels which have been replaced by others, shut down, or acquired by other companies.
UK Arena UK Arena was one of the original three UKTV network channels, launching on . The channel focused on airing
arts and cultural programmes and was named after BBC's
Arena programme. The channel was relaunched on 31 March 2000 as UK Drama (now U&Alibi) with a focus on showing dramas rather than general arts programmes.
Play UK Play UK focused heavily on music and comedy programming, and was the first of the UKTV networks to initially launch digitally (and also to coincide with the launch of
OnDigital [later ITV Digital]). It launched as UK Play on 10 October 1998 alongside the launch of Sky Digital, with a majority of its scheduling consisting of music in the morning and afternoon while broadcasting comedy in the evening. The channel rebranded as Play UK in November 2000, becoming the first of the UKTV networks to gain the new logo. The channel broadcast for 24hours a day on digital platforms, but also aired as a filler channel on the Sky Analogue platform (on the
Astra 19.2°E satellites), broadcasting between within
UK Horizons' slot during its downtime. The closure of ITV Digital led to the channel's viewership decreasing significantly, and its failure to compete with
MTV also corresponded to its decline. The channel closed on on all platforms, and a month later on 30October, its vacated EPG bandwidth space was used to launch a brand new channel for the launch of the
Freeview platformUK History. The programmes that formerly aired on Play UK would move to UK Gold, and eventually UK G2.
UK Gold Classics/UK Gold 2 UK Gold Classics was a sister channel to UK Gold that broadcast older comedy programming, as the main UK Gold channel was focusing more on newer shows. It launched on 10 October 1998 and was exclusive to Sky Digital. Due to poor viewing figures, the channel ended its run on 28 March 1999, and on , it was relaunched as UK Gold 2, becoming a secondary timeshift service for UK Gold that aired the channel's daytime programming in the evening. The channel closed on 11 November 2003, and relaunched as the younger-oriented and edgier UK G2 the following day.
UK Horizons UK Horizons was one of the original three UKTV network channels, launching on . The channel focused on airing
documentaries and other factual programmes and was named after BBC's
Horizon programme, which itself formed a staple of its output in the early years. It also produced extended versions of top BBC brands such as
Top Gear and ''Tomorrow's World''. The launch editor was Bryher Scudamore and the deputy editor was Eddie Tulasiewicz. The channel closed on 7 March 2004, as part of UKTV's relaunch. UK Horizons was split into two new channelsUKTV Documentary and UKTV People, which both launched the following day on 8March. UKTV Documentary took over UK Horizons' slot, as well as the UK Horizons +1 timeshift service, with UKTV People being the "new" channel.
UKTV Bright Ideas UKTV Bright Ideas originally launched as UK Bright Ideas on , initially as a
Freeview exclusive before being expanded. Similar to
Ftn, the channel it timeshared with, UK Bright Ideas was essentially a highlights network aimed towards the
Freeview audience, by airing programmes featured on UKTV Style,
UKTV Food and
UKTV Gardens. In January2005, it began showing programmes branded by UKTV Sport, presumably to increase potential audience figures by extending the programme to Freeview viewers. It ceased broadcasting on all platforms on 14 October 2007 at 6pm. The main aim for the closure was to coincide of the rebranding of UKTV G2 as Dave, which would allow the channel to broadcast on Freeview. It would also allow Dave's timeshift service to expand to 24hours, which it wasn't able to do as UKTV G2, due to Bright Ideas sharing the same EPG bandwidth on Sky and Virgin Media. The former EPG slot on Sky was later used for a filler networkUKTV Style +2.
UKTV Gardens UKTV Gardens was the second offshoot network of UKTV Style, and launched on as UKTV Style Gardens. As the name implies, the channel aired programmes in relation to gardening. The channel name was shortened to UKTV Gardens in 2007. On 19 May 2009, the channel was replaced with Really, with all the gardening programmes moving back to the newly rebranded Home.
Blighty Blighty was a factual network that originally launched on 8 March 2004 as UKTV People, as a two-way split from UK Horizons (the other being UKTV Documentary, now
U&Eden). The output of Blighty was
some factual programming of a lighter nature, such as
Top Gear and docusoaps like
Airport, and from February2009 following its rebranding, "British" shows like
My Brilliant Britain. However, the majority of the channel's programming was abridged by the BBC for commercial timing purposes, a policy that some critics consider hypocritical. The channel was available on
Sky and Virgin Media. However, it was not available on Freeview, despite the majority of the programmes being made by the BBC. The channel closed on all platforms on 5 July 2013, three days ahead of the launch of Drama.
Good Food acquisition
Good Food focused on food and cookery programming. It originally launched on 1 November 2001 as UK Food, as the first offshoot network of UK Style. It rebranded as UKTV Food in March2004, and eventually as Good Food in June2009, being the last UKTV channel to rebrand. Good Food broadcast a range of food and cookery programmes, similar to that of the content of BBC Worldwide's
BBC Food service. Initially, most of the channel's output was aired on Home as well. The Good Food website originally devised and launched by Ian Fenn and Ally Branley provides a number of services including information on programmes shown on the channel, recipes, message boards, and a wine club. Recipes come from the various shows on Good Food and some include videos taken from the demonstrations. In September 2006, Good Food's website overtook the BBC Food site in popularity for the first time, achieving a 10% market share, against the 9.63% the BBC Food site dropped to, having held the top spot since it began. It was named "Good Food Channel" on the UKTV website due to the fact that there is a magazine named Good Food. Following the split of the UKTV network from
BBC Studios and
Discovery, Inc. on 1 April 2019, Discovery took over control of Good Food, but they eventually closed the channel a few months later on 12September, merging all its programming into their existing sister channel
Food Network.
Home Home was one of the original three UKTV network channels, launching on 1 November 1997 as UK Style. The channel broadcast home improvement, food, DIY and gardening programmes that are a combination of internally produced shows and repeats of shows mainly from the BBC archive. Eventually, the food programmes were moved onto an offshoot network named UK Food (Good Food) in November2001, and the gardening programmes followed suit onto UKTV Style Gardens in February 2005. It was rebranded as UKTV Style in March 2004, and eventually the channel was rebranded as Home in April 2009. On 1 March 2016, Home became a free-to-air network as it launched on
Freeview. Following the split of the UKTV network from
BBC Studios and
Discovery, Inc. on , Discovery took over control of Home, and in June, Discovery announced that the channel would be rebranded under their
HGTV brand, with the channel rebranding as such on 21 January 2020. Eventually, Warner Bros. Discovery closed HGTV on 13th January 2026, nearly six years after its rebrand from Home. HGTV's former programming moved to
Really and its channel slot on Freeview and
Freesat was taken by
TLC.
Really Really focuses entirely on medical crime, real life and lifestyle shows and was another offshoot from UKTV Style. It launched on , replacing UKTV Gardens. Following the split of the UKTV network from
BBC Studios and
Discovery, Inc. on , Discovery took over control of Really.
CCXTV In October 2020, UKTV Media took over the licence of the Freeview channel CCXTV, a channel which had been set up by
Ideal Shopping Direct Ltd as a sister channel to their Create and Craft shopping channel. CCXTV was launched on 15 April 2020 as an entertainment channel and took over Create and Craft's channel number (Freeview23), broadcasting from 7am until 10pm. Even though Create and Craft still had a shopping slot early on in the morning on Channel23, the rest of the schedule was made up of imports and re-runs of shows like
The Bold and The Beautiful. On , CCXTV moved to Freeview channel73, with Dave Ja Vu moving to channel23. On 25 January 2021, it was announced that timeshift channel Drama+1 would be taking over Freeview channel73 on 1 February 2021, with CCXTV ending transmission.
UK Living UK Living was originally affiliated with UK Gold but did not become part of the UKTV network, instead transferring to Flextech to be operated as a wholly owned company, and it changed its name to
Living before the UKTV network launched.
GoldText An analogue
teletext service known as GoldText was available on UK Gold, but has since closed down.
Operating names In the
production logo screen at the end of UKTV's original commissions, for the channels
Watch,
Gold and
Dave the name UK Gold Services Ltd. is used instead of UKTV, as all three channels spawned from the original UK Gold channel. For the remaining channels,
Alibi,
Drama,
Eden and
Yesterday, the name UKTV New Ventures Ltd. is used instead of UKTV.
Timeshift channels UKTV launched its first one-hour timeshift network
UK Horizons +1 Hour (U&Eden +1), in May 2001. This was followed up with the launch of
UK Style + (HGTV +1) in February2002, and
UK Gold +1 (U&Gold +1) in August 2002. November 2003 saw the launch of UK Food +1 (Good Food +1), while 2004 saw the additions of
UK History +1 (U&Yesterday +1) in January, and
UKTV G2 +1 in November. 2005 saw the addition of UKTV People +1, which was closed the following year and replaced with UKTV Drama +1 (U&Alibi +1) in May 2006. December 2007 saw the launch of UKTV Style 2 (U&W) on Sky, a two-hour timeshift service that existed as a filler network whenever UKTV needed the space for another channel. It closed on 15 September 2008, in order to prepare for the launch of Watch. Watch +1 (U&W +1) launched with the channel on 7 October 2008. Drama +1 (U&Drama +1) launched on 16 September 2019.
HD channels UKTV launched its first HD channel;
Good Food HD on 31 August 2010. The channel was originally available exclusively on
Sky channel283.
Eden HD launched on 4 October 2010 on
Sky channel559 and was the second HD simulcast from UKTV. Both channels are
high-definition simulcasts of their standard definition counterparts. UKTV announced on 29 July 2011 that they would be launching three new HD channels,
Dave HD and
Watch HD (then known as W HD and now U&W HD) launched in October2011, and
U&Alibi HD launched in July 2012. As part of Virgin Media's deal to sell its share of UKTV, all five of UKTV's HD channels were also added to Virgin's cable television service by 2012. On 2 October 2017, UKTV launched
U&Gold HD, replacing Eden HD on Sky. It was soon added to Virgin Media in August2018, replacing the SD feed. 2022 saw Yesterday HD (now U&Yesterday HD) launch on Sky in August, and Virgin Media in December. == Awards and nominations ==