$2 per credit. $5 per credit. $10 per credit.
Huge price differences. Same features listed.
What are you actually paying for?
Here's the scenario: you're comparing IPTV panel providers. One charges $2/credit. Another charges $6/credit. Both claim "99.9% uptime" and "premium channels."
What actually works is understanding that credit price correlates almost perfectly with server infrastructure quality. Not always. But almost always.
The pattern that keeps showing up? Budget IPTV service panels buy leftover bandwidth from oversold CDNs. Premium panels own or lease dedicated servers with guaranteed capacity.
Let me break down what your credit price buys:
$1-2 per credit:
Shared servers (2000+ users per node)
Consumer-grade CDN
Support response: 24-48 hours
$3-5 per credit:
Semi-dedicated servers (500-800 users per node)
Business-grade CDN
Support response: 4-12 hours
$6-10 per credit:
Dedicated server nodes (under 300 users per node)
Premium CDN with auto-failover
Support response: under 2 hours
In most cases, sports IPTV fans need the $3-5 tier. Budget tiers fail during playoffs. Premium tiers are overkill for most.
Here's the thing: I tested three IPTV panel credit tiers simultaneously for a month. The $2/credit service buffered 14 times during one NFL Sunday. The $5/credit service? Zero buffering. Same channels. Same internet connection. Different infrastructure.
A quick practical breakdown: before buying any IPTV panel credits, ask the provider two questions. "What's your average users per server node?" and "Can I see a recent server load graph?" If they can't answer, assume the worst.
That said, some providers overcharge for garbage. Price alone isn't proof. Test before committing.
IPTV service quality leaves traces in the panel data. You just have to know where to look.