22 Roku Free Streaming Channels List Revealed

Roku has expanded the lineup of free live channels available through The Roku Channel, bringing the total number of ad-supported options above 500.
The additions, reported Saturday by Cord Cutters News, include a mix of movie collections, reality programming, classic television series, sports networks, nature and history content, news, and international drama.
All 22 channels are now accessible at no cost to users of Roku TVs, Roku streaming players, and Roku-powered smart TVs from other manufacturers. They appear in the Live TV guide on compatible devices and require only an internet connection.
The 22 new channels are:
- The Hunger Games 4-Film Collection
- Ink Masters Pluto
- MTV en Español
- Tosh.0 Pluto
- Rawhide Pluto
- The Beverly Hillbillies
- Property Brothers
- Nat Geo History
- Nat Geo Animals
- Nat Geo Travel
- Game & Fish TV
- Salem News Channel
- Grizzly & The Lemmings
- Jail En Español
- FloRacing 24/7
- Inspector Gadget
- Scripps Sports Network
- MotoGP Channel
- Vive Kanal D Drama
- DP World Tour
- Roku Moods Nature
- Complex TV
Several of the channels focus on established franchises and linear-style programming that runs 24 hours a day, including dedicated blocks of reality competition series such as Ink Masters and Tosh.0, Western classics like Rawhide, and family sitcoms such as The Beverly Hillbillies.
Others deliver specialized content, from National Geographic-branded history, wildlife, and travel programming to live-action racing coverage on FloRacing 24/7 and MotoGP Channel, golf on DP World Tour, and fishing on Game & Fish TV.
International options include MTV en Español, Jail En Español, and Vive Kanal D Drama, while news and lifestyle additions cover Salem News Channel, Scripps Sports Network, and Complex TV.
The rollout follows a pattern of steady growth for The Roku Channel throughout 2026.
Earlier batches added channels focused on news, sports, animation, and Spanish-language programming, reflecting Roku’s emphasis on free ad-supported streaming television, or FAST, as a core part of its platform strategy.
The service, which launched in 2017, now serves as a hub for both on-demand movies and shows as well as linear live channels that do not require separate subscriptions or logins.
These latest channels integrate directly into the existing Live TV experience on Roku devices, where users can browse by category or channel number without additional setup.
The expansion arrives as consumers continue to seek lower-cost alternatives to traditional cable and paid streaming bundles.