Skip to main content

Amazon Fire TV fans have reason to celebrate: HBO Now has finally arrived

Amazon Fire TV Stick kit
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Amazon Fire tablet owners have been enjoying HBO Now since July, but strangely enough, the streaming service wasn’t actually available on the company’s Fire TV or Fire TV Stick – devices actually meant for watching TV and movies – until today.

As reported by TechCrunch, the app appeared for owners of Fire TV devices quietly today, with the update notes simply stating that version 1.0.0 “is now available for Fire TV and Fire TV Stick devices.” Whether or not the update saw much in the way of fanfare, this brings HBO’s $15/month standalone streaming service one step closer to being available to the streaming public at large.

The HBO Now app itself is free, but requires a $15 per month subscription to pipe into the HBO mainline. Unlike its predecessor HBO Go, HBO Now doesn’t require a cable subscription for access, appealing to those who have given up the ghost on pay TV. Both services allow viewers to watch virtually all programming in real-time as it airs on the network channels, in addition to on-demand streaming of the full catalog of shows in HBO’s catalog. If you’re not already an HBO Now subscriber, a 30-day free trial is available after downloading the app.

While HBO Now was initially exclusive to Apple TV devices, the service has expanded to more platforms since its initial release in April of this year. Earlier this month HBO Now arrived on Google’s Chromecast after being made available for Android phones and tablets in July.

Aside from individual smart TVs, the only major streaming platform without an HBO Now app is the Roku. A subscription to the Internet TV service Sling TV can give Roku owners access to HBO in roundabout way, but those who don’t use Sling are left out for the time being. While it is assumed an HBO Now app for Roku devices is in the works, there’s no word as to when it might arrive.

Amazon’s Fire TV sells for $100, which the slimmed-down Fire TV Stick sells for just $40. The Fire TV Stick is our pick for better value, though it shares some of the same caveats of the original Fire TV, like limited voice search.

If you’re a huge Game of Thrones or Silicon Valley fan who doesn’t want to be tied down by a cable subscription, HBO Now is definitely worth exploring, and now that the service has arrived on both the Fire TV Stick and Chromecast, it’s never been easier (or more affordable) to get in.

Editors' Recommendations

Kris Wouk
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kris Wouk is a tech writer, gadget reviewer, blogger, and whatever it's called when someone makes videos for the web. In his…
Amazon celebrates 200 million Fire TV devices by launching more
Amazon Fire TV Omni QLED Series TV.

Amazon today announced that it's bolstering the high end of its Fire TV Omni Series line of televisions with new sizes and entry into new international markets, while also bringing new sets to the more affordable side of the equation. And the news comes as the company also announced that it's sold more than 200 million Fire TV devices worldwide. For context, that number was around 150 million in January 2022.

First up: The — heretofore available in 65- and 75-inch sizes — gains options at 43, 50 and 55 inches. They're up for preorder at Amazon starting today (at $449, $529, and $599, respectively), and will be available at Best Buy on May 11. These are fundamentally the same as what we reviewed previously, Amazon says, only with fewer local dimming zones because of the smaller size.

Read more
Amazon Fire TVs can stream directly to hearing implants
A man with a cochlear hearing implant listens to TV audio.

A select number of Amazon Fire TV devices now support audio streaming to hearing implants, thanks to a partnership between Amazon and Cochlear, the world's largest provider of hearing implants. It lets hearing implant users hear a variety of audio content. Depending on the Fire TV device, that includes streaming movies and shows from Netflix and Amazon Prime Video, podcasts, audiobooks, Alexa voice feedback, system sounds, and audio from local TV networks.

The new feature uses a Bluetooth protocol known as Audio Streaming for Hearing Aids (ASHA), along with special modifications for the specific needs of those who use implants. At the moment, hearing implant streaming is available on Fire TV Omni QLED Series, Fire TV Omni Series, Fire TV 4-Series, Fire TV Cube (3rd Gen), and Fire TV Cube (2nd Gen) devices. It will work with Cochlear Nucleus 8, Nucleus 7, Nucleus Kanso 2, and Baha 6 Max sound processors.

Read more
Amazon Echo Show 15 is getting the full Fire TV update today
Amazon Fire TV on Echo Show 15.

The line between the Amazon Echo Show 15 and a Fire TV is blurring, with the former getting the experience of the latter starting today with a software update.

It won't quite turn your Echo Show 15 into a Fire TV 15, per se. But it'll give it full access to the Amazon Appstore, and that means you should have all the apps available to essentially turn it into a wall-mounted streaming powerhouse (provided that everything's square when it comes to APIs and app updates, but we have a feeling Amazon and the developers will have that figured out in short order, if things aren't already working as expected).

Read more