You paste your British IPTV M3U link into a new app, it works for a few hours, then dies — and now you're regenerating links every morning like a ritual. Here's the truth: your IPTV reseller configured their British IPTV panel to expire M3U links aggressively because short-lived links make it harder for you to share your subscription with too many people. The pattern that keeps showing up across British IPTV link management is this: an IPTV reseller using a cheap IPTV reseller panel sets link expiry to 24-48 hours because that's the default. A British IPTV reseller who understands their IPTV panel sets expiry to 7-30 days for loyal customers or offers permanent tokens. A real-world example: a user's British IPTV M3U link expired every 8 hours, forcing him to log into the IPTV reseller's website to generate a new one multiple times daily. He asked why. The IPTV reseller admitted his IPTV panel link expiry was set to 6 hours to "prevent sharing" — but it also prevented normal use. That said, ask your British IPTV seller before subscribing: "What's your M3U link expiry time, and can I get a longer one?" An IPTV reseller with a flexible IPTV panel will say yes to longer expiry. Quick practical breakdown: a user-friendly IPTV panel supports permanent device-specific tokens or 30-day rolling links. Ask for a 30-day link during your trial. In most cases, the British IPTV reseller who refuses to extend expiry is the one who doesn't trust their own IPTV panel security — or doesn't trust you. Honestly, I stopped using a British IPTV service because regenerating M3U links every morning felt like a part-time job. The next IPTV reseller gave me a link that lasted 90 days. That's a properly configured IPTV panel.