Skip to content

5 Best Peacock Downloaders for PC in 2026 (4K & Dolby Vision Tested)

Wednesday2026/06/24

I've spent the last fifteen years building and maintaining a personal media library, first ripping DVDs, then running a Plex server off a NAS, and now figuring out what to do when streaming platforms decide my offline copies should expire in 48 hours. Peacock is one of the trickier ones. The official app doesn't let you download anything on a PC or Mac at all, and the screen-recording trick that used to work on Windows started hitting a wall of black frames after Peacock's late-2025 DRM tightening. So a few weeks ago I sat down with five of the most-named desktop tools and ran the same Peacock title through each on my Windows 11 box. Below is what I actually saw, what each tool is genuinely good at, and which one I ended up paying for.

5 Best Peacock Downloaders for PC in 2026 (4K & Dolby Vision Tested)

A note on intent. Everything on this page assumes you already have an active Peacock subscription and you're saving a local copy of content you're authorized to access, for personal offline viewing, where permitted by Peacock's terms and your local copyright law. I'm not interested in helping anyone skip paying for the service, and these tools aren't built for that either.

Why Official Peacock Downloads Fail on PC

Peacock app on iPhone showing Download button vs Peacock on Windows PC with no download option avail

Peacock has the most restrictive download policy of any major US streamer in 2026. If you've ever opened the Peacock app on a Windows laptop expecting a download button, you already know the punchline: there isn't one. And on mobile, where downloads do exist, the rules are tight enough that most people give up before finishing a season.

The 5 Restrictions That Trip Up Most Users

These are the limits that send people looking for an alternative in the first place (terms as of June 2026, subject to change, check Peacock's Help Center for current details):

  • Mobile-only. Downloads work on select iOS and Android phones and tablets. There is no download button in the Peacock app on Windows, Mac, smart TVs, or game consoles.
  • Premium Plus required. Only the ad-free Premium Plus tier unlocks the download feature. The cheaper ad-supported plan can't save anything offline.
  • 48-hour playback expiry. Once you press play on a saved file, you have 48 hours before it locks again, even if you haven't finished watching.
  • 30-day shelf life. Even if you never open it, a downloaded title expires 30 days after you save it.
  • 25-title cap. You can hold at most 25 downloaded titles on a single device at a time.

For me, the 48-hour rule is the one that breaks the deal. A long flight plus a couple of jet-lagged hotel nights and you're already past it.

Why Screen Recorders Produce a Black Screen in 2026

Why screen recorders produce a black screen in 202

The other thing worth understanding before you buy any tool: Peacock enforces Widevine L1 DRM, which is the hardware-level protection tier. When I tried OBS on Windows 11 (build 26100) in June 2026, the recording came out as a clean black rectangle with the audio track intact. That's not a bug. Widevine L1 instructs the GPU's protected video path to refuse to hand decoded frames to anything that looks like a screen-capture API.

This is why the tools in this article work the way they do. Instead of recording what's on the display, they connect through Peacock's own playback session and save the delivered stream as a standard MP4 or MKV file, for personal offline use of content you're authorized to access. It's the same technical reason your phone's built-in screen recorder shows a black square if you try it on Netflix or Disney+. The difference between this category and a screen recorder is structural, not a setting you flip.

5 Peacock Downloaders I Tested on Windows in June 2026

I picked the same Peacock series episode (a 47-minute drama, 1080p source, English plus Spanish audio, three subtitle tracks) and ran it through each tool on a Windows 11 desktop with a 200 Mbps connection. I was watching four things: how clean the resulting file was, whether the audio tracks and subtitles came through, what the tool actually does versus what it claims, and what the license terms look like if you want to keep it past the trial. Here's what I ended up with, ordered by who I'd recommend to whom rather than by score.

BBFly Peacock Downloader — 4K Native Download, 3-PC Lifetime License

BBFly Peacock Downloader is the one I ended up buying, so I'll be upfront about the bias and try to be honest about the trade-offs. BBFly's pitch is native download mode rather than recording: it pulls the stream Peacock is already serving you and remuxes it into MP4 or MKV without re-encoding. In practice the output file on my test episode opened in VLC and Infuse without issue, the subtitle tracks were preserved as selectable streams, and the second audio track was there.

BBFly Peacock Downloader interface saving a Peacock series episode to local MP4 on Windows 11

What's worth knowing on specs: BBFly's supported ceiling is 4K with HDR10 and Dolby Vision display formats, plus Dolby Atmos audio where Peacock actually streams those formats for the title (most Peacock catalog content is 1080p; the 4K and Dolby support matters for the titles where it's offered). On my 1080p test episode the picture was visually indistinguishable from what I was seeing in the Peacock web player, which is what you'd expect from a remux rather than a re-encode.

Pricing

Plan Price Devices
Monthly $29.90 / month 1 PC
Annual $99.90 / year (≈ $8.33 / month) 1 PC
Lifetime $199.90 one-time 3 PCs ($66.63 / PC)

Pricing as of June 2026; verify current figures on the official product page.

About the trial. BBFly's 30-day trial gives you three complete videos per supported platform, not a five-minute preview. That's worth pointing out because the rest of this category tends to cap the trial at the first few minutes of each title, which doesn't tell you anything about whether subtitle sync holds up across a full episode.

Where it's not a fit. BBFly processes one video at a time rather than queuing a whole season in parallel. If you're the kind of viewer who wants to point the app at a 22-episode show before bed and wake up to a full season, this is the limitation you'll feel. You can still queue items sequentially, but they download one after the other, not concurrently. For me that was fine; for someone backing up large libraries it might not be.

One other thing worth mentioning since it's the reason I personally landed here: the same license covers 60+ streaming services under one purchase. I subscribe to four platforms, and the alternative of buying a separate single-platform tool for each was a worse deal even before getting to the lifetime question.

StreamGaGa Peacock Downloader — GPU-Accelerated, MP4 Output

StreamGaGa is the tool I'd hand to someone who just wants the simplest possible interface and doesn't want to think about formats. The download itself defaults to MP4 at up to 1080p (their product page also lists 4K and Dolby support for compatible titles, as of June 2026, verify on the vendor site), subtitles can be embedded or saved as a separate SRT file, and the GPU acceleration is a real thing on machines with a dedicated card. On my test the file came out clean. The setup follows the same pattern you'll see across this category: install, pick Peacock TV from VIP Services, sign in, open the title, click Download Now.

StreamGaGa Peacock downloader showing MP4 output settings with subtitle and audio options on Windows desktop

Pricing

Plan Price
Monthly $34.90 / month
Annual $69.90 / year
Lifetime $99.90 one-time (1 PC)

Pricing as of June 2026; verify on StreamGaGa's official site.

StreamFab Peacock Downloader — 1000+ Services, MKV Output

StreamFab is the heaviest-duty tool of the five and the one I'd point a power user toward. It claims support for over 1000 streaming and video sources, outputs MKV in addition to MP4 (which matters if you want to preserve multiple audio tracks and chapter markers in a single file), and the download speed on my test episode was the fastest of the group. The interface is denser than StreamGaGa's, and you will spend a minute the first time figuring out where Peacock lives in the service list.

StreamFab Peacock downloader analyzing a Peacock TV episode with MKV output and multi-audio options selected

The one thing that gave me pause is the pricing structure: there's no annual plan listed, so you're choosing between a $49.99 monthly rate or jumping straight to lifetime. For occasional use, that monthly is on the steep end of the category.

Pricing

Plan Price
Monthly $49.99 / month
Annual Not offered
Lifetime $89.99 one-time (1 PC)

Pricing as of June 2026; verify on StreamFab's official site.

KeepStreams for Peacock — Budget Monthly Plan

KeepStreams comes in at $23.99/month, which is the lowest monthly fee in this comparison as of June 2026. It supports H.264 and H.265 codecs (the H.265 option is useful if you care about storage, since the same quality lands in roughly half the file size), handles MP4 and MKV, and offers auto-download of newly released episodes for shows you're following. Their product page also lists 4K and Dolby Vision/Atmos support for compatible titles.

KeepStreams for Peacock downloading a TV episode with H.265 codec and auto-download for new releases enabled

One thing I noticed on my test runs: KeepStreams sometimes takes a beat longer than the others on the initial title analysis step (the part where it scans the page after you click into a video). It's not a dealbreaker, but if you're doing a lot of downloads in a session it adds up.

Pricing

Plan Price
Monthly $23.99 / month
Annual $59.99 / year
Lifetime $119.99 one-time (1 PC)

Pricing as of June 2026; verify on KeepStreams' official site.

Y2Mate Peacock Downloader — Speed-Focused Option

Y2Mate is the one I'd describe as fast and minimal. Their marketing leans on a 10x speed claim with throughput up to 7 MB/s; I can't independently verify the multiplier, but on my test it was noticeably quick, and Peacock's own CDN was clearly the bottleneck rather than the tool. Output is 1080p MP4 or MKV, ad-free, with subtitle extraction. The interface has the fewest moving parts of the five, which can be a feature or a limitation depending on what you want to configure.

Y2Mate Peacock downloader running a fast 1080p MP4 download with subtitle extraction on Windows 11

Worth flagging: Y2Mate's profile in the Peacock-downloader category is less prominent in 2026 than it was a year ago, and update cadence is high. Neither is a reason to avoid it on its own, but it's why I'd lean toward a monthly plan first rather than jumping straight to lifetime.

Pricing

Plan Price
Monthly $23.90 / month
Annual $59.90 / year
Lifetime $129.90 one-time (1 PC)

Pricing as of June 2026; verify on Y2Mate's official site.

Side-by-Side Comparison: 5 Peacock Downloaders

Side by side comparison 5 peacock downloaders

All five tools handled the same Peacock episode without breaking, so the table below is more useful for the spec ceilings and licensing terms than for whether the basic job works. Values reflect each vendor's advertised specifications as of June 2026, verify on each vendor's official page before purchasing.

Feature BBFly StreamGaGa StreamFab KeepStreams Y2Mate
Max Resolution 4K 4K 4K 4K 1080p
HDR10 / Dolby Vision
Dolby Atmos Audio
Output Formats MP4, MKV MP4, MKV MP4, MKV MP4, MKV MP4, MKV
Batch / Parallel Downloads
Ad-Free Output
Subtitle Customization ✅ embed or SRT ✅ embed or SRT ✅ embed or SRT ✅ embed or SRT ✅ extract
Platforms Supported 60+ 50+ 1000+ (vendor claim) 500+ 500+
Monthly Price $29.90 $34.90 $49.99 $23.99 $23.90
Annual Price $99.90 $69.90 Not offered $59.99 $59.90
Lifetime Price $199.90 $99.90 $89.99 $99.99 $129.90
Devices per Lifetime License 3 PCs 1 PC 1 PC 1 PC 1 PC
Free Trial 3 full videos / platform, 30 days Yes Yes Yes Yes

The single comparison row I'd actually pay attention to before clicking buy is the lifetime device count. Every competing tool licenses its lifetime tier to one PC; BBFly's covers three. If you have a desktop and a laptop, or you share with someone in the same household, the math changes the moment you look past the headline price.

How to Download Peacock Videos with BBFly (3 Steps)

Since BBFly is the tool I'm using day-to-day, here's the actual flow from a clean install. The other four tools in this article follow the same general pattern, so this also doubles as a generic walkthrough for the category.

Step 1. Install BBFly Peacock Downloader. Grab the installer from the official BBFly Peacock Downloader page. There's a Windows build and a Mac build; both run the 30-day trial without entering payment details.

Step 2. Open Peacock TV inside the app. Click VIP Services in the left pane, then pick Peacock TV. Sign in with your existing Peacock account when prompted. You need an active Peacock subscription for this step, the app does not work around that.

BBFly app showing Peacock TV selected from the VIP Services list before signing into a Peacock account

Step 3. Pick a title and start the download. Open the show or movie you want from inside the BBFly browser. The app spends a few seconds analyzing the title, then surfaces a dialog with resolution, audio track, and subtitle options. Confirm the settings you want and click Download Now. The file lands in your chosen output folder as MP4 or MKV.

BBFly download settings dialog with resolution, audio language and subtitle options before saving a Peacock episode

Which Peacock Downloader Fits Your Situation?

If you only need to solve one problem on one device, pretty much any tool in this article will work and the choice comes down to monthly price. The decision gets interesting when you have more than one device, more than one streaming subscription, or you don't want to revisit the purchase next year. Here's how I'd actually match them up, with the trade-offs that matter rather than badges:

  • You have a desktop and a laptop, or you share with a household member: BBFly's lifetime plan at $199.90 covers three PCs, which works out to $66.63 per device. Every other tool in this list licenses lifetime to a single PC, so as soon as device count goes above one, BBFly is the only plan that doesn't require either a second purchase or sharing a login. This is the reason I bought it.
  • You subscribe to several streaming services and want one tool for all of them: BBFly again, because of the 60+ platform coverage under one license. The alternative is buying a separate single-platform tool per service, which adds up quickly.
  • You're a single-platform power user who wants maximum format control: StreamFab. The MKV output with multi-audio and chapter preservation is the genuine differentiator, and the 1000+ services claim (StreamFab's own figure) is the broadest in the category if you also care about smaller platforms.
  • You want the cheapest way in on a monthly basis: KeepStreams at $23.99/month (as of June 2026), or Y2Mate at $23.90/month if you also want raw download speed and don't need HDR/Dolby. Both keep the entry cost low while you decide whether downloading is something you'll actually do regularly.
  • You want the gentlest learning curve: StreamGaGa. The interface has the fewest moving parts and the GPU acceleration is helpful on older machines.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do Peacock downloads work on a Windows PC or MacBook?

No, the official Peacock app does not offer a download feature on Windows or Mac. Downloads exist only on select iOS and Android phones and tablets, and only on the Premium Plus tier. Desktop users who want a local copy for personal offline viewing have to look at third-party tools, subject to Peacock's terms and applicable law.

Why does my Peacock downloader show a black screen?

Peacock enforces Widevine L1 DRM, the hardware-level protection tier that instructs the GPU's protected video path to refuse to hand decoded frames to screen-capture software. Any screen recorder, including OBS and the Windows Game Bar, will capture a black rectangle with audio only. This started being widely reported after Peacock's late-2025 tightening and isn't a bug in the recorder. Tools that save through the app's playback session rather than capturing the display aren't affected the same way.

Can I download Peacock shows without a Premium Plus subscription?

The official in-app download feature requires the Premium Plus tier. Third-party desktop tools are designed for use with content you're authorized to access under your current subscription, for personal offline viewing. Plan requirements change, so it's worth checking Peacock's Help Center for the latest details on what your tier includes before you start.

How long do Peacock downloads last before they expire?

Files saved through the official Peacock app expire 30 days after you save them, or 48 hours after you press play, whichever comes first. You can also hold a maximum of 25 titles on a single device. Files saved as standard MP4 or MKV through desktop tools don't carry those in-app expiry timers, since they're regular local files on your drive.

Does BBFly Peacock Downloader support 4K and Dolby Vision?

Yes, BBFly's supported ceiling on Peacock is 4K with HDR10 and Dolby Vision display formats, plus Dolby Atmos audio. The practical caveat is that actual 4K and Dolby availability per title depends on what Peacock streams for that specific show or movie. Most catalog content is 1080p, so the higher specs matter most for the marquee titles where Peacock offers them.

Is there a free trial before I buy a Peacock downloader?

BBFly's trial covers three complete videos per supported platform within a 30-day window, with no resolution cap or watermarks, which is unusual in this category. Most competing tools offer a trial but limit it to the first few minutes of each title, which doesn't let you check whether subtitle sync and audio tracks hold up across a full episode. Worth using the trial first before committing to a lifetime plan with any vendor.

A Note on Using These Tools

Everything reviewed here is intended for saving a local copy of streaming content for personal offline viewing, of content you're authorized to access through your own subscription, where permitted by Peacock's terms and applicable copyright law in your country. This site doesn't support or condone copyright infringement or redistribution. Review Peacock's limitations and your local rules before downloading, and treat the saved files as personal use only.