Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K vs. Roku Premiere: Which should you buy?

Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K

Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K

Amazon has been refining the Fire TV platform for many generations, and the latest Fire TV Stick is the culmination of all those years of refinement. It plugs right into the HDMI port of your 4K TV and also includes the functionality of Alexa.

Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K

Support for 4K, Dolby Vision and Dolby Atmos
Fire TV interface is really simple to use
Remote is well-designed
No official YouTube app

Roku Premiere

Roku Premiere

The Roku Premiere is a compact 4K streamer that offers quite a lot of value for a low price. Roku supports all the major streaming services including Netflix, Hulu, and Amazon Prime along with a huge library of free channels offering varied content.

Roku Premiere

Great value for a 4K streaming device
Support for streaming services and user channels
Roku's so easy to set up and use
Streaming app is also quite convenient
Free channel content is hit and miss

Choosing between an Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K and the Roku Premiere might just down to your allegiance to Amazon's larger ecosystem of products and services because they both offer a ton of great content to stream with user-friendly interfaces. Both can deliver 4K HDR quality where available, while the Fire TV Stick offers a remote with built-in voice controls. While Roku lacks support for Alexa — strangely enough, there's not even an Alexa Skill for Roku — it instead offers its own compatibility with Google Assistant for searching for and playing content.

Let's break it down

There are some distinct differences in design between the two. The Fire TV Stick is a compact dongle that plugs right into the back of your TV, with an included HDMI extender cable if space is pretty tight. The Roku Premiere is similarly compact and includes an HDMI for connecting to your TV, but it's light enough to be mounted to the back of your TV.

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Header Cell - Column 0 Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K Roku Premiere
Dimensions 4.7 x 1.6 x 0.5 in 3.3 x 1.4 x 1 in
Supports 4K Yes Yes
Supports HDR Yes Yes
Remote with microphone Yes No
Works with Alexa Yes No
Works with Google Assistant No Yes

On the software side of things, you're bound for a similar experience no matter which device you choose. Both Roku and Amazon's let you customize your home screen with your favorite content sources, and the interface is intuitive and familiar if you've ever used a streaming service before. Amazon does a predictably good job pointing you towards its own video streaming and Alexa's built-in functionality. You'll be able to find the most popular streaming services, but you won't find an official YouTube app on the Fire TV any time soon. There's always a workaround available , but if you love to stream YouTube it might be a deal-breaker.

Roku has no direct stake in the streaming service game and isn't competing so head-to-head with Google, so there's a ton of streaming services and channels under the Roku umbrella. Each service gets equal weight on the Roku platform, but the remote does prominently feature hotkey buttons for Netflix, Sling, Hulu, and DirecTV Now so that's a convenient inclusion if you're a subscriber to any of those services. Another cool feature that Roku offers is the Roku app for Android which lets you control everything from your phone, plug in headphones for private viewing sessions, and use a mobile keyboard when you're searching for content to watch. You can also conveniently cast content from your phone to your Roku-connected TV which might come in handy especially around the holidays.

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