Jio OTT Pass Rs 200 is Reliance Jio's latest push to fold streaming, live TV and data into a single, fairly aggressive entertainment bundle.
The 28-day add-on plan is now live across India, but it only works on top of an active Jio base recharge and does not include voice or SMS benefits.
Priced at Rs 200, the pass promises benefits worth roughly Rs 1,500 a month by combining access to 15 premium OTT platforms, over 1,000 live TV channels, 30GB of high-speed data and unlimited 5G usage tied to the user's base plan validity, for up to 28 days. The headline streaming additions are YouTube Premium, JioHotstar Mobile + Hollywood and Prime Video Mobile Edition, aimed at users who would otherwise pay separate subscription fees.
Beyond these, 12 more services are bundled via the JioTV app: SonyLiv, ZEE5, Lionsgate Play, Discovery+, Sun NXT, FanCode, Kanccha Lannka, Planet Marathi, Chaupal, Hoichoi, TimesPlay and Tarang Plus. On the live TV side, JioTV offers more than 1,000 channels, including over 150 paid options from broadcasters such as JioStar, Sony Entertainment, Sun TV Network, Warner Bros. Discovery and ETV.
The Jio OTT Pass Rs 200 add-on includes 30GB of high-speed 4G/5G data, with unlimited 5G continuing for as long as the customer's existing base plan remains valid, capped at 28 days. Jio stresses that this is a data and content pack, so users will still rely on their underlying prepaid plan for calling and SMS services.
The pass went on sale from 27 May 2026 and is available across MyJio, the Jio.com website, retail points of sale and popular third-party recharge platforms in all telecom circles. Any prepaid customer with an active Jio base plan can activate the OTT Pass as an add-on, positioning it as a relatively low-cost way to sample multiple streaming apps at once.
For heavy mobile viewers, Jio's new bundle will likely feel like a straightforward upgrade: a cluster of mainstream OTT services, ad-free YouTube and a significant live TV line-up, all folded into one recharge. At around Rs 7 per day, the offer undercuts the combined sticker price of individual app subscriptions, though it remains tied firmly to Jio's own network and an existing base pack.
The move underlines how telecom operators are racing to anchor customers inside their own content ecosystems, with aggressive pricing around 5G data and streaming access rather than plain talktime. For users willing to stay within Jio's walled garden, the Jio OTT Pass Rs 200 looks like a strong, if tightly bundled, sign of where India's mobile entertainment market is heading next.

