4K upgrades are finally reaching purchased TV shows in the Apple TV app, marking a long-awaited expansion of a policy Apple first made popular with movies nearly a decade ago. The change means select series bought through Apple’s digital storefront are now being upgraded from HD to 4K at no extra charge, giving users sharper versions inside their existing libraries without requiring a new purchase.
The rollout appears limited for now, but it is a meaningful shift for Apple’s digital video store. Since the launch of the first Apple TV 4K in 2017, Apple has offered free 4K upgrades for many eligible movie purchases. TV shows, however, remained largely stuck in HD for years, even as streaming services and physical media moved more premium series into 4K.
Early tracking shows the first batch includes roughly 49 TV shows, with upgrades appearing in 4K SDR rather than Dolby Vision or HDR10 in many cases. The list is not yet universal, and availability may vary by season, studio, region, and listing. Some series appear to have every season upgraded, while others have only select seasons available in the higher resolution.
4K Upgrades Bring TV Purchases Closer to Movies
The upgrades close one of the more visible gaps between Apple’s movie store and its TV catalog. For years, movie buyers could benefit when Apple or a studio added a 4K version to the store. A film originally bought in HD often appeared later in a user’s library as 4K, sometimes with HDR or Dolby Atmos support depending on rights and availability.
TV purchases were more complicated. Shows are sold by season and episode, with rights often split across studios, distributors, territories, and older digital listings. That made 4K availability less consistent, even when the same series had a 4K version on another platform or through a newer streaming release.
The new Apple TV upgrades do not instantly solve the entire catalog problem, but they suggest Apple is beginning to treat TV purchases more like movies. That matters for users who still buy shows rather than relying only on subscriptions. A purchased season carries a different expectation: it sits in a library, remains available across devices, and can improve in value when higher-quality versions replace older files.
The early list reportedly includes shows such as Mad Men, Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, RuPaul’s Drag Race UK, The RVers, Auto Exotica, and Ice Airport Alaska, though not every series has the same upgrade pattern. Mad Men appears to be one of the cleaner examples, with all seven seasons upgraded, while other shows have partial season coverage.
Why the Upgrade Is Starting With 4K SDR
The first wave appearing in 4K SDR is an interesting choice. Many viewers associate 4K upgrades with HDR, Dolby Vision, brighter highlights, wider color, and more dramatic home-theater improvements. SDR does not deliver that same visual range, but it still provides a sharper image than HD when the source and display support it.
That can make a real difference for older prestige dramas, documentaries, reality series, and scripted shows originally mastered or remastered in higher resolution. Textures, faces, production design, film grain, signage, establishing shots, and background detail can all benefit from a cleaner 4K presentation, even without HDR.
There may also be licensing and mastering reasons for starting with SDR. A show may have a 4K master without approved HDR grading. A studio may prefer to release a conservative 4K version rather than rebuild the full presentation for Dolby Vision. Some shows may also have season-by-season differences depending on how they were produced, archived, restored, or delivered to Apple.
For users, the most useful reading is simple: 4K SDR is still an upgrade. It may not carry every premium video badge, but it raises the quality ceiling for purchased TV libraries and creates a path for more formats later if studios provide them.
Apple TV Shows Now Available in Free 4K Upgrades
|
Title and Season |
|
|---|---|
|
Aerial Australia |
Hunting to Save the Rhinos S1 |
|
Aftertaste S1 |
The Hunting Wives S1 |
|
American Magik S1 |
Ice Airport Alaska S5 |
|
Auto Exotica S2 |
Killer Whales S2 |
|
The Basement Talks S1 |
Legacy Makers S1 |
|
Black, Brilliant, and Bold S1 |
Mad Men S1-7 |
|
Blossoms Shanghai S1 |
Missionary: Obeying the Great Commission S1 |
|
Bong Zombies S1 |
My Name is Anxiety S1 |
|
Building Nations S1 |
Office Joe S1 |
|
Car & Country Quest S1 |
Perfect Sweat S1 |
|
Changing of the Gods S1 |
Q: Into the Storm |
|
Chasing the Tide S1 |
The Religion Business and the Nonprofit Goliath S1 |
|
Claire-ity S1 |
Rich Africans S1 |
|
Clash of Dynasties: St. Edward vs Walsh Jesuit |
RuPaul’s Drag Race UK S5 |
|
The Coroner’s Assistant S1 |
The RVers S3-4 |
|
Drink: A Look Inside the Glass S1 |
Selling Superman S1 |
|
The Envoy, Pilot |
Sexpectations S1 |
|
The Eternal White S1 |
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds S1 |
|
Extreme Airport Africa S2 |
That’s Wine S1 |
|
Founder S1 |
Third Shift |
|
Gatherings S1 |
Tractor Ted S3 |
|
Gentle and Lowly Video Study S1 |
The Twilight Zone (Reboot) S1 |
|
Guerrera S1 |
The Wingfeather Saga S2 |
|
Gus Plus Us S1 |
|
|
Heated Rivalry S1 |
|
|
Honor Guard S1 |
What Users Need to Check
The upgrades appear automatically for eligible purchases. Users should not need to rebuy a season if their existing purchase qualifies. In the Apple TV app, the show’s detail page or library listing should display the available quality badge, though device, region, and storefront behavior may affect what appears.
A compatible device and display are still required to watch in 4K. Apple TV 4K remains the best-known living-room option, but the Apple TV app is also available across iPhone, iPad, Mac, smart TVs, game consoles, and streaming devices. Playback quality can depend on the device, internet speed, display capabilities, HDMI connection, and the app version.
Users should also remember that Apple’s digital upgrade behavior is tied to store listings and rights. If a studio creates a separate listing for a 4K version, an older HD purchase may not always transfer automatically. Apple’s movie upgrade policy has usually been generous, but it has never meant every title in every region receives every premium format forever.
The same caution applies to TV shows. A few upgraded seasons do not guarantee a full-series upgrade. A 4K badge on one territory’s storefront does not guarantee the same in another country. And a show available in 4K through a subscription service does not always mean the purchased version in Apple’s store has been upgraded.
A Better Case for Owning Digital TV
The timing gives Apple a stronger argument for purchased digital media at a moment when subscription catalogs keep shifting. Shows move between services, licensing windows expire, and even popular titles can become harder to find without stacking multiple monthly plans. Purchased TV seasons remain a niche habit compared with streaming, but they appeal to users who want stable access to favorite shows without tracking where each title has moved.
Free upgrades make that model easier to defend. A user who bought a favorite series years ago may now see it improve without a new transaction. That turns a static library into something closer to a maintained collection, especially when updates arrive silently through the Apple TV app.
It also gives Apple TV 4K hardware another practical advantage. Apple’s streaming box already supports high-bitrate playback, Dolby Vision, HDR10+, Dolby Atmos, Match Dynamic Range, and Match Frame Rate. A growing library of upgraded TV purchases gives that hardware more owned content to show beyond streaming apps and Apple TV originals.
The next phase will be catalog depth. If Apple and studios expand the program beyond the first batch, TV purchases could finally follow the same path movies took after 2017. The most useful sign will be whether larger scripted libraries, older HBO-era dramas, network classics, animation, and long-running franchises start gaining 4K badges season by season inside user libraries.
