Amazon is slimming things down again in the living room. The company has launched the Fire TV Stick HD, its thinnest streaming stick to date, aimed squarely at people who want a modern, fast streaming experience without buying a new TV or lugging around bulky gear while they travel.
At a starting price of $34.99 in the US, the new Fire TV Stick HD is positioned as an entry-level device that doesn’t feel “entry-level” in day-to-day use. It’s about 30 percent slimmer than the previous HD stick, which sounds like a small tweak until you’ve tried to squeeze a streaming dongle into a crowded HDMI panel on the back of a hotel TV or an older set at home. The stick is designed to be powered directly from your TV’s USB port via the included cable, so you can often skip the wall adapter entirely and keep cable clutter under control. For anyone who travels with a streaming stick in their backpack or carry-on, that combination of slimmer hardware and USB power is the whole point of this refresh.
Under the hood, this isn’t just a cosmetic diet. Amazon says the Fire TV Stick HD is more than 30 percent faster on average than the last-generation HD stick, so you should see snappier wake times and quicker app launches. It supports Wi-Fi 6 for more stable and faster wireless connections on compatible routers, plus Bluetooth 5.3 for better accessory support and lower power use compared to older Bluetooth standards. In practice, that means fewer buffering wheels when everyone in your home is online, and more reliable connections if you pair Bluetooth headphones or speakers for late-night watching.
On the software side, the new stick is Amazon’s attempt to bring its refreshed Fire TV experience to any TV with an HDMI port. The interface that started rolling out earlier in 2026 is cleaner and more organized, with dedicated sections for movies, TV shows, live content, sports, and news, so you spend less time digging through apps and more time actually watching something. For Japan, Amazon is even adding a dedicated anime hub inside the Fire TV experience, pulling together anime titles from across different services into a single, curated destination. It’s a clear sign that Amazon wants Fire TV to feel a bit more like a “service layer” on top of apps, not just a glorified app launcher.
One of the bigger headlines is that Amazon’s next-generation assistant, Alexa+, is baked right into the Fire TV Stick HD in select regions. In the US, Canada, and the UK, you can talk to Alexa+ through your remote to get smarter, more conversational recommendations based on what you actually watch. You can ask for “a thriller series that’s not too long for weeknights,” learn more about the actor currently on screen, or handle smart home controls like dimming the lights without leaving the show. Alexa+ can also jump straight to specific scenes in movies on Prime Video when you describe them, so instead of scrubbing blindly, you might say “take me to the car chase in the middle” and let Fire TV do the work.
Accessibility is another area where Amazon is trying to quietly raise the bar. The company has spent years adding features like Dialogue Boost to make voices easier to hear, Audio Descriptions for people with low or no vision, and high contrast text for better legibility on Fire TV devices. Now it’s preparing to roll out a new Adaptive Display option to the Fire TV Stick HD in the coming months. Turn it on, and text, menus, and smaller interface elements get larger and easier to read, while artwork and other visuals are scaled proportionally so the whole screen still feels balanced. You’ll be able to choose from multiple size options, which should help a wide range of users tune the experience to their comfort level rather than living with a one-size-fits-all UI.
Travel and portability are clearly baked into the design brief. Being around 30 percent narrower than the previous HD stick makes it easier to slip into a pocket or the sleeve of a laptop bag, and it’s more likely to fit into tight HDMI ports on hotel TVs that may already be half-blocked by plastic bezels or wall mounts. If you can’t use the USB port on a TV to power it, the stick is still flexible enough to run via a standard USB-C cable and a wall adapter, so you’re not stuck if you forgot the included cable at home. For frequent travelers who are tired of clunky hotel interfaces and limited channel lineups, tossing this stick into your bag means your own apps, watchlists, and profiles are always one HDMI port away.

In terms of where you can actually buy it, Amazon is rolling out the Fire TV Stick HD in phases. In the US, Canada, Mexico, the UK, Japan, Australia, and New Zealand, it’s up for preorder now at $34.99 and is scheduled to start shipping around April 29. Customers in Germany, France, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, Belgium, Poland, and Sweden can’t order it yet, but they can sign up on their local Amazon sites to be notified when it goes on sale. That staggered approach isn’t new for Amazon hardware, but it does show that this “HD and slim” stick is meant to be a truly global product over time, not just a US one-off.
All of this sits inside a broader Fire TV strategy where Amazon wants to be both on your TV and in your TV. The company already works with big manufacturers like Hisense, Panasonic, TCL, Toshiba, and Xiaomi to ship TVs with Fire TV built in, and customers have bought tens of millions of those sets worldwide. For people who aren’t ready to buy a new television, though, a sub-$40 stick that can modernize any HDMI port is the easier sell. Amazon is pitching this new HD stick as the answer if you have an older HD TV, want a faster experience with the newer Fire TV interface and Alexa+, or just need something small and reliable to take on the road.
What the Fire TV Stick HD doesn’t try to do is compete on raw specs with Amazon’s more premium 4K devices. If you care about 4K, advanced HDR formats, or the absolute fastest performance, you’re still going to be looking at the company’s 4K and 4K Max sticks or its higher-end Fire TV sets, which reviewers consistently note are more capable (and more expensive) options. The HD stick instead leans on simplicity: plug it into any TV with HDMI, power it through USB when you can, sign in once, and carry your streaming setup from living room to bedroom to Airbnb without thinking about it too much.
For everyday viewers in the US who just want something cheap and competent to stream Netflix, Prime Video, YouTube, and live TV services, this is exactly the kind of low‑friction hardware that tends to sell by the millions. It’s small, it’s relatively affordable, and thanks to the new UI and Alexa+, it should feel more modern than the “basic stick” label suggests. If you’re sitting on an older HD television that still has a good panel but painfully slow built‑in apps, or you’re tired of playing HDMI roulette in hotel rooms, Amazon’s slimmest Fire TV Stick HD is very much designed with you in mind.
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