You don't want adult channels. Neither do I. But how a reseller handles them tells you everything about their channel management.
A British IPTV reseller who keeps adult content in a separate, PIN-protected category has organised their channel list thoughtfully. One who mixes adult channels into general entertainment is sloppy — and that sloppiness extends everywhere.
Here's what the organisation signals: if they can't be bothered to separate sensitive content, they also aren't checking for dead channels, fixing EPG mismatches, or monitoring source health. The channel list is a mirror of their operational discipline.
In most cases, what actually works is checking the channel groups during your trial. A British IPTV service with clean categories (Sports, News, Entertainment, Kids, Adult [PIN]) has been curated. A chaotic dump (Group 1, Group 2, FHD, TEST, etc.) hasn't.
Scenario: you open the channel list. Adult channels are mixed right in with kids' programming. You scroll past "Family Guy" and then "Adult 18+" immediately after. This same reseller probably also has 3,000 dead channels they never removed.
I've seen an IPTV reseller UK with impeccable channel organisation — everything grouped, labelled, working. Their support response time? 15 minutes. Their uptime? Genuinely high. The organisation wasn't cosmetic. It was a symptom of competence.
Honestly, channel organisation is free. It costs nothing to sort categories. If a British IPTV reseller can't do the free things right, they definitely aren't doing the expensive things (server maintenance, source redundancy) right.
A British IPTV reseller who respects your viewing preferences enough to separate adult content respects their entire operation enough to maintain it properly.