Antenna Installation/United States

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Antenna Installation Prices United States

Prices exclude sales tax. Standard residential antenna installation. Multi-storey homes and commercial buildings cost more.

12 service types4 cities with data
Prices updated March 2026Based on 480+ quotes

Last updated March 2026. We benchmark United States antenna installation prices against roughly 480+ completed and live quote observations, then normalise antenna type, roof access difficulty, signal strength, amplification, and cabling scope so the ranges compare like-for-like jobs.

Quick Answer

Antenna installation prices in United States depend on roof type and height, signal strength at the property, number of TV points, and whether amplification is needed. Standard single-storey installs stay near the low end, while multi-storey homes, weak signal areas, and whole-house upgrades cost materially more.

Antenna Installation Prices by Service — United States

Prices exclude sales tax. Standard residential antenna installation. Multi-storey homes and commercial buildings cost more.

ServiceFromAverageUp to
📡Digital TV Antenna Install (Standard)

Standard OTA digital TV antenna installation on a typical single-family home

$120/job$200/job$300/job
🏠Digital TV Antenna Install (Difficult Roof)

Antenna installation on multi-storey, steep pitch or complex roof

$200/job$300/job$420/job
🔄Antenna Replacement

Remove old antenna and install new digital antenna on existing mast

$150/job$230/job$350/job
🔌Additional TV Outlet

Run new coaxial cable to additional TV outlet

$65/point$100/point$150/point
📶Signal Amplifier Install

Install distribution amplifier for multi-room OTA reception

$100/job$155/job$240/job
🔧Antenna Repair

Diagnose and repair faulty antenna — re-aiming, cable or connector fix

$80/job$135/job$210/job
📺Satellite Dish Install

Install satellite dish with cabling to one TV point

$80/job$150/job$250/job
🏢Commercial Antenna System

Commercial-grade antenna system for multi-unit buildings or offices

$400/job$950/job$1700/job
🧱Antenna Wall Mount

Mount antenna on exterior wall — suits condos and HOA-restricted properties

$120/job$195/job$300/job
Preamplifier Install

Install preamplifier at antenna mast for maximum signal strength

$80/job$135/job$210/job
🔗Antenna Cabling (Per Run)

Run new RG6 coaxial cable from antenna to TV location

$50/run$80/run$130/run
🏡Whole-House Antenna Upgrade

Full cord-cutting antenna setup — new antenna, amplifier, splitter and cabling to all TVs

$250/job$400/job$600/job

Common Antenna Installation Jobs in United States

Typical scopes customers compare before they hire

JobTypical scopeTimeframeBuying note
Standard digital TV antenna installNew digital antenna on a single-storey home with clear roof access and one TV point connected1-2 hoursThe most common residential job and the easiest to compare across quotes.
Antenna replacement on existing mountRemove old analogue or damaged antenna and install new digital antenna on existing mast and cabling1-2 hoursCheaper than a full new install if the existing mount and cabling are still in good condition.
Difficult roof or multi-storey installAntenna installation on steep-pitch, tiled, or multi-storey roof requiring harness and extra safety equipment2-4 hoursHeight and roof type are the biggest cost drivers — always confirm access assumptions before comparing quotes.
Signal booster or amplifier installInstall distribution amplifier or masthead amplifier to boost weak signal across multiple TV points1-2 hoursOften added to an existing antenna rather than a standalone job — bundling with other work reduces the effective call-out cost.
Whole-house antenna upgradeFull system upgrade including new antenna, masthead amplifier, splitter, and cabling to all TV points in the home3-5 hoursThe most comprehensive residential job — worth quoting when the existing system is old, corroded, or producing poor signal across multiple rooms.
Commercial antenna systemDesign and install commercial-grade antenna distribution for apartment blocks, hotels, or office buildingsHalf day to full dayRequires signal survey, distribution amplifier design, and often strata or body corporate coordination.

What Affects Price in United States

Roof type, height and access difficulty

Single-storey homes with colorbond or tin roofs are the cheapest to quote. Steep-pitch tile roofs, multi-storey homes, and heritage properties require harness equipment, longer setup time, and sometimes specialist brackets — all of which increase the install cost.

Signal strength and location

Properties in strong signal areas close to transmission towers need simpler antennas and no amplification. Fringe or weak-signal areas require larger antennas, masthead amplifiers, and sometimes multiple antenna configurations to receive all channels reliably.

Number of TV points and cabling

Each additional TV point requires a cable run from the antenna splitter to the outlet location. Longer runs, runs through brick walls, and runs requiring ceiling or under-floor access cost more than short runs through accessible roof spaces.

Antenna type and system complexity

A basic UHF digital antenna is the cheapest option. Combined VHF/UHF antennas, phased-array antennas for difficult reception, satellite dishes, and commercial distribution systems each add equipment and installation complexity that moves the price higher.

Country Context

US antenna installation is driven by cord-cutting demand as households move away from cable subscriptions. ATSC 3.0 (NextGen TV) is rolling out in major markets, which means newer antennas are needed to access 4K broadcast content. Pricing varies by region based on distance from broadcast towers and roof construction.

Included vs extra

Usually included

  • Site signal survey and antenna positioning assessment
  • Labour, antenna hardware, and mounting bracket for the agreed scope
  • Basic cabling from antenna to one TV point using RG6 quad-shield coaxial cable
  • Signal strength check and channel tuning on one TV after installation

Often extra

  • Masthead amplifier or distribution amplifier for weak signal areas
  • Additional TV point cabling beyond the first included outlet
  • Difficult roof access surcharge for multi-storey, steep, or heritage roofs
  • Old antenna removal and disposal when not replaced on the same mount

DIY vs Professional

Indoor antenna for one TV

DIY: A reasonable option in strong signal areas. Plug-and-play indoor antennas cost under $50 and require no tools.

Professional: Not usually needed unless signal quality is poor due to building materials blocking reception.

Roof-mounted antenna installation

DIY: High risk. Roof work requires harness equipment and fall-protection training. Incorrect antenna positioning causes poor reception that is difficult to diagnose from ground level.

Professional: A professional installer has the signal meter, safety equipment, and experience to position the antenna correctly the first time.

Signal troubleshooting and amplifier install

DIY: Technically possible but difficult to diagnose without a signal meter. Incorrect amplifier placement can make reception worse, not better.

Professional: A professional can measure signal at each point in the system, identify the fault, and install the correct amplifier type in the right location.

Seasonal Booking Guide

Spring

A strong booking window as homeowners prepare for severe weather season and want reliable reception before storms arrive.

Summer

Longest daylight hours suit larger commercial and multi-point residential installations. However, extreme heat in southern states may slow roof work.

Cord-cutting peaks (Q1 and post-Super Bowl)

Antenna installation demand rises when households cancel cable subscriptions, particularly in January and after major sporting events highlight free-to-air content.

How to Save Money on Antenna Installation

  • Bundle additional TV points with the antenna install rather than booking separate call-outs later.
  • Ask whether the old antenna mount and cabling can be reused to reduce labour and materials cost.
  • Get a signal survey before committing to a masthead amplifier — you may not need one in strong signal areas.
  • Compare quotes on the same scope by checking whether cabling, amplification, and old antenna removal are included.
  • Book outside peak moving and renovation seasons for better availability and pricing.

Methodology

How We Get These Prices: Last updated March 2026. WhatCosts benchmarks antenna installation costs from submitted quotes, completed jobs, installer pricing checks and city-level comparisons across United States. We use a sample of roughly 480+ quote observations and separate antenna type, roof access, signal amplification, and cabling scope because those cost layers move independently. That prevents low-detail quotes and edge-case commercial jobs from distorting the residential guide.

Antenna installation in United States ranges from $50/job for basic services to $1700/job for larger commercial or whole-house upgrade jobs. Prices exclude sales tax. Standard residential antenna installation. Multi-storey homes and commercial buildings cost more.

The most common antenna installation services in United States include Digital TV Antenna Install (Standard), Digital TV Antenna Install (Difficult Roof), Antenna Replacement, Additional TV Outlet, Signal Amplifier Install and more. Each service has different equipment, signal, and access requirements that affect pricing.

In United States, the service is commonly referred to as antenna installation / TV antenna. The terminology reflects local industry conventions and the broadcast technology used in the region.

A standard digital TV antenna install takes 1-2 hours. A whole-house upgrade with multiple TV points takes 3-5 hours. Commercial antenna systems for apartment buildings may take a full day or more depending on the number of outlets and distribution design.

Roof type and height, signal strength at the property, number of TV points, and whether amplification is needed are the biggest variables in United States. A straightforward single-storey install on a tin roof is far cheaper than a multi-storey tile roof in a weak signal area.

Most quotes in United States include the antenna hardware, mounting bracket, labour, basic cabling to one TV point, and a signal check after installation. Amplifiers, additional TV point cabling, difficult roof access surcharges, and old antenna removal are commonly quoted as extras.

DIY antenna installation is possible for indoor antennas in strong signal areas, but roof-mounted installations involve height safety risks and require proper signal metering equipment. Incorrect positioning wastes time and may result in poor reception that is difficult to diagnose without professional tools.

Quieter periods outside peak moving season generally offer better availability and pricing in United States. Booking before storm season also avoids the demand spike that follows widespread antenna damage from high winds.