This post was originally published in October 2022. It has been updated with new developments, most recently on May 16, 2024 with news about Apple’s iPad AV1 decoder and Firefox encrypted media extensions support.
In this post, I’ll be taking a look at the current state of AV1 playback support, covering which browsers, mobile devices, smart TVs, consoles and streaming sticks are compatible with the AV1 codec right now. I’ll also touch on some of the incredible bandwidth savings companies like Netflix are seeing with AV1 and detail the latest announcements, rumors and speculation around future AV1 playback support.
Table of Contents
AV1: The Story So Far (2017-2023)
Back in 2017, Bitmovin debuted the world’s first AV1 live encoding at the NAB Show in Las Vegas, earning a Best of NAB award. While it was an exciting proof of concept at the time, AV1 playback support was extremely limited and large-scale production usage wouldn’t come until years later. In 2020, YouTube and Netflix began delivering AV1 to the first compatible Android devices, and last year Netflix shared details about their expanded use of AV1 for 4K streams.
Netflix also published a report that showed over the course of one month in early 2022, 21% of their streamed content benefited from the most recent improvements in codec efficiency, like Per-Title optimized AV1 and HEVC. They estimated that without those improvements, total Netflix traffic globally would have been around 24% higher, proving that you can see massive bandwidth and overall cost savings by encoding just a portion of your most popular content with AV1.
Apple adds AV1 hardware decoding support to iPhone 15 Pro and new Macbooks
Many of us who have been tracking the adoption and progress of AV1 were disappointed when the announcements for Apple’s M-series processors over the past couple years did not include AV1 hardware decoding support. But on September 12, 2023, the big moment we’ve been waiting for finally arrived when Apple announced that the A17 Pro chip in their new iPhone 15 Pro would include a dedicated AV1 decoder. This is a big line in the sand for Apple and for the wider industry and will hopefully prove to be the day that revitalized interest and momentum for AV1 adoption across the industry.
“We also included a dedicated AV1 decoder, enabling more efficient and high-quality video experiences for streaming services.”
Sribalan Santhanam – VP, Apple Silicon Engineering Group
After the presentation, co-author of the HLS spec Roger Pantos shared more details via the hls-interest mailing list:
The iPhone 15 Pro (both screen sizes) will be the first Apple product to support hardware decode of AV1 content. This includes SDR, HDR10, and content protected by FairPlay Streaming, played back through either AVPlayer or AVSampleBufferDisplayLayer (including MSE on Safari).
There is no new signaling necessary for HLS, just the regular content-specific values for the CODECS and VIDEO-RANGE attributes in the MVP. If you wish, you can use the SCORE attribute to make the client prefer AV1 over other encodings (but please continue to provide renditions encoded with AVC and/or HEVC for compatibility with earlier devices and AirPlay).
A month later in October 2023, Apple announced their newest generation of desktop processors would include AV1 hardware decoders. This includes the M3, M3 Pro and M3 Max chips, meaning all new models of Macbooks, iMacs and desktop computers with an M3 processor will also support AV1 video playback.
Earlier in 2023, while everyone was waiting for Apple to officially support AV1, Meta took matters into their own hands, sharing how they brought AV1 to their Reels videos for Facebook and Instagram, including on iOS devices. This became possible through ongoing open source software decoding efficiency improvements, in particular with the dav1d decoder, developed by VideoLAN. Meta also said they believe for their video products, AV1 is the most viable codec for the coming years. The image below shows how they significantly improved visual quality with AV1 over VP9 and H.264, while keeping the bitrate constant.
At Bitmovin we also believe in the potential of AV1 and have explored the possibilities of software decoding on mobile devices. At a recent internal hackathon, one of our senior software engineers, Roland Kákonyi, built a custom iOS player using the dav1d decoder that was able to decode and smoothly play 1080p AV1 content. We’ll continue exploring this further as a way to fill gaps in playback coverage for devices lacking hardware support.
AV1 Playback Support News in 2024
Following 2023’s big announcements from Apple, 2024 got off to a strong start with Android, Firefox and (again) Apple adding new AV1 playback support. The barriers and arguments against adopting AV1 continue falling, slowly, but surely.
Android adds dav1d decoder
In March 2024, VideoLAN’s “dav1d” became available to all Android devices running Android 12 or higher. Apps need to opt-in to using AV1 for now, but according to Google, most devices can at least keep up with software decoding of 720p 30fps video. YouTube initially opted to begin using dav1d on devices without a hardware decoder, but may have reverted that decision, likely due to battery concerns on phones. For plug-in Android devices, dav1d is still a great option and a welcome addition to the ecosystem.
Firefox adds AV1 support in Encrypted Media Extensions
While Firefox was the first major browser to support AV1 playback, a long-standing bug (or lack of implementation) prevented DRM-protected AV1 from playing. When Apple added support to Safari for HLS + FairPlay streaming, it meant Firefox was the only major browser that still did not support premium, secure content. That changed in April 2024, when Firefox 125 added AV1 support in encrypted media extensions, meaning Widewine-protected AV1 is now supported.
iPad Pro gets AV1 playback support with M4 processor
In early May 2024, Apple continued their march toward full AV1 support with the announcement of their new M4 chip, which will power the new iPad Pro. The Media Engine of M4 is the most advanced to come to iPad, supporting several popular video codecs, like H.264, HEVC, and ProRes, in addition to AV1.
Current State of AV1 Playback support
To answer the question of current playback support as thoroughly as possible, we created several sample streams with different combinations of containers, muxings and DRM. While there will be some exceptions and omissions, especially when you go back to the 2021 and 2020 models, I’ll use the emojis below to show the general level of support you can expect from these platforms and brands right now and give the full results of our direct testing in the table at the end.
- ✅💯 Fully Supported – Successful AV1 playback with all test streams, including DRM
- ✅ Partial or Documented Support – Successfully played at least one, but not all of our test streams OR the product documentation claims AV1 playback support, but has not yet been verified by Bitmovin
- ❌ Not Supported – AV1 playback not supported here currently
Browsers and Operating Systems
✅💯 Chrome
✅💯 Edge
✅ Firefox
✅ Safari*
✅💯 Android
✅ Windows
✅ iOS / macOS **
*Safari 17 or later, when a hardware decoder is present
**AV1 is also supported in Chrome and Firefox on macOS
Generally speaking, the Chrome browser and Android ecosystem handle AV1 well across phones, tablets, smart TVs and set-top boxes/streaming sticks. Unfortunately, the same cannot be said for Safari and iOS where support had been lacking until the iPhone 15 Pro announcement.
Firefox was the first major browser to support AV1, and recently Firefox 125 added support for AV1 in Encrypted Media Extensions, meaning Widevine-protected content is now playable.
The Edge browser on Windows 10 and later supports AV1, but you may need to install the free AV1 Video Extension from the Microsoft Store.
For more details about the specific versions and less common browsers that support AV1, check out the table from CanIUse.com here.
Smart TVs
✅ Android TV
✅ Google TV
✅ Samsung
✅ Sony
✅ LG
✅ Amazon Fire TV
As mentioned, Android handles AV1 quite nicely, which also applies to the Smart TVs running Android TV and Google TV operating systems. These include Sony Google TV models from 2021 on and many Amazon Fire TV models as far back as 2020. (FireOS is based on Android)
Samsung TVs (and phones) from late 2020 onward have AV1 hardware decoders and were mentioned by Netflix as some of the first outlets for their 4K AV1 content.
LG has developer documentation stating AV1 is supported for their UHD TVs and projectors running WebOS 5.0 and above, although our testing on some 2020 models was unsuccessful.
Consoles and Streaming Sticks
✅💯 Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K Max
✅ Playstation 4 Pro
✅ Xbox One
✅ Roku Streaming Stick 4K
Playstation 4 Pro was also called out by Netflix as one of the targets for their 4K AV1 streams and it takes advantage of GPU-accelerated decoding. Netflix didn’t publicly mention delivering AV1 to Xbox One, but the same decode libraries that the PS4 Pro uses were first made available for Xbox One, so it should be possible.
The Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K Max has AV1 + DRM support, making it one of the cheapest and best options for giving older 4K TVs an AV1 upgrade.
Roku is a little bit of a gray area at the moment. Officially, they still do not support AV1 as an adaptive streaming video codec, but newer models like the Roku Ultra that have a USB port do support AV1 playback via USB media. There does appear to be some level of support for AV1 adaptive streaming, as the YouTube “stats for nerds” overlay reveals a combination of AV1 video and opus audio playing on many of the popular recommended videos. Hopefully wider support is coming, but in the meantime, did confirm successful playback of our single file “progressive” AV1 MP4 files on the Streaming Stick 4K.
Looking Ahead: Future AV1 Playback Support
Even with gaps in support on some platforms, there is plenty of opportunity to see tangible bandwidth savings and quality improvements from AV1 right now and thankfully, the future looks even brighter. Intel, AMD, Samsung and Qualcomm have all announced additional AV1 support coming at the chip level.
Will Apple add AV1 software decoding support for older devices?
There have been several indications that Apple would eventually support AV1. Apple joined the Alliance for Open Media, the organization responsible for creating and promoting AV1 encoding, back in 2018, which many took as a sign that Apple would eventually support it. We’re hopeful that with the addition of AV1 hardware decoding support to the iPhone Pro 15, iPad Pro and Macbooks, Apple will also add official HLS support and fallback software decoding for older devices that are capable.
Conclusion
While AV1 support and adoption has been on the rise and we’ve seen some encouraging announcements, universal support like we have with H.264 is just not there yet. That means AV1 will need to be part of a multi-codec approach for the foreseeable future, but that’s ok! Not that long ago, it took millions of views to offset the higher encoding costs of AV1, but with recent improvements, we’ve seen the break-even point drop to as low as 4,000 views! So for a whole lot of content, encoding with AV1 can already save you money right now and those savings will only increase as more supporting devices become available.
Ready to get started with AV1 encoding? You can try it for free with a Bitmovin Trial, sign up here!
Video Codec | Chrome | Edge | Firefox | Safari | Android Native | Android Web | iOS | Fire TV Max | Fire TV Max Web (Silk Browser) | Roku Streaming Stick 4K | Samsung Tizen (2020-2021) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
fMP4 (DASH) | |||||||||||
fMP4 with Widevine and Playready (DASH) | |||||||||||
Single file “progressive” MP4 (.mp4) | |||||||||||
Single file “progressive” MP4 + Widevine (DASH) | |||||||||||
WebM (DASH) | |||||||||||
WebM + Widevine (DASH) | |||||||||||
Single file “progressive” WebM (DASH) | |||||||||||
Single file “progressive” WebM + Widevine (DASH) | |||||||||||
fMP4 (HLS) | – | – | – | – | – | – | |||||
fMP4 + Fairplay (HLS) | – | – | – | – | – | – |