Forum Discussion
I agree it should turn off. Maybe if I turn the TV off directly it is "ok" to stay on. But if I turn the TV off via my Roku remote's power it clearly knows I am turning it off and should shut down, or as it says, go back to the home screen for me. How hard is it for Roku to do those 2 things with the power button on their device?
I was told that to stop your ISP from streaming data, you must unplug the Roku Ultra. No other functionality on the remote will do this. So when I watch a 30 minute HULU live program and turn off my Roku remote, my ISP continues to stream for another 4 hours at 4GB/hr.
It seems that if the Roku is able to initiate the APP streaming, it should be able to STOP it, right?
Any techno wizards out there?
- atc980924 years agoCommunity Streaming Expert
CG901 wrote:I was told that to stop your ISP from streaming data, you must unplug the Roku Ultra.
You were told wrong. If you turn the TV off while the Roku is streaming, yes it will continue streaming data. But if you press the Home button on the Roku remote before doing anything else, you will exit whatever channel you are in and streaming will stop. Your Roku will still on occasion check with the Roku update servers to see if there's something waiting for your device, but that's a minimal amount of data used.
And you would have the same thing happen with a Fire TV, Shield, or some other streaming player. This isn't something specific to a Roku. They operate independently of the TV itself, and it will continue streaming in whatever mode you left it in when the TV is turned off.
- Cathysusanwelsh4 years agoReel Rookie
I was told this over 18 months ago. and Press the Home button now before powering off.
I also needed to set the TV setting to turn the USB off when the TV is turned off, so the Roku actually powers off.'
- atc980924 years agoCommunity Streaming Expert
Cathysusanwelsh wrote:I also needed to set the TV setting to turn the USB off when the TV is turned off, so the Roku actually powers off.'
That works as well, although many TVs don't provide enough power in their USB ports for a Roku player. And some don't work from USB power at all. Pressing the Home button works on all devices.
- way2kulsmash3 years agoNewbie
CG901 I accept your answer about returning to ROKU home stops streaming and using data. Thanks
- CG9014 years agoChannel Surfer
I was relying on this article as well.
https://internet-access-guide.com/does-roku-keep-streaming-when-tv-is-off/
- atc980924 years agoCommunity Streaming Expert
Well, that article has one big mistake right off the bat:
"There are multiple Roku devices out there, and all of them are designed with an on-off switch."
That is completely in error. No Roku player has ever had an on-off switch. A Roku TV has a power button that will put the TV in standby mode, as do virtually every other brand of TV. But the power button found on Roku remotes are there solely to turn off a connected device. For example, I can hit the power button on my Ultra, and it will turn off my TV and my AVR, all connected via HDMI so CEC is controlling it. But the Roku itself is still "on".
- Strega4 years agoRoku Guru
Pressing the home button will fix that. (Off on a roku remote turns the TV off - not the Roku.)
- Orly154 years agoNewbie
Going back to “home” won’t fix it. The only thing that that will stop Roku from using your data is unplugging the tv from the wall, no electricity and it will stop streaming. Trust me!!!!! I tried everything else. I went over 150GB in 25 days because if this. Unless Roku fix this issue I will never buy one again. I will sale the one I have and go back to firestick.
- atc980924 years agoCommunity Streaming Expert
Orly15 Roku is not using "Gigabits" of data if it's not streaming. Pressing Home ensures that nothing is streaming. Yes, there's still some minor data passage when the Roku isn't in active use, but if streaming is stopped there's not a significant amount of data used.
- CG9014 years agoChannel Surfer
Using the HOME button, then the power button on the remote, turns off theTV and the Roku?
Does that strop the APP stream or just the Roku device data?