Your IPTV Reseller Panel knows where you are. Every time your device requests a stream, it sends an IP address. The panel checks that IP against a geo-blocking list — rules that say "allow UK, allow Ireland, block everywhere else" or something similar. When you cross a border, your IP changes. The panel's decision changes with it. Here's the thing: British IPTV users who travel within the UK — London to Edinburgh, for example — sometimes get blocked because their new IP range isn't in the panel's "allowed" list. The panel sees an unfamiliar IP and assumes it's an intrusion. Example: a reseller had a British IPTV customer who traveled weekly from Manchester to Glasgow for work. Every Monday morning, his stream wouldn't load. The reseller checked the IPTV Reseller Panel geo-logs and saw Glasgow IP addresses being flagged as "suspicious." He expanded his allowed IP ranges to cover all UK postcodes. The customer never had another Monday morning problem. The pattern that keeps showing up is this: most IPTV Reseller Panel geo-blocking rules are too strict by default. They block valid users while trying to block abusers. For British IPTV specifically, use country-level blocking (allow UK only) rather than city-level blocking. City-level databases are inaccurate. What actually works is reviewing your IPTV Reseller Panel geo-blocking logs monthly. Look for patterns of false positives — valid users being blocked in error. Add their IP ranges to an exception list. Honestly, most resellers never look at geo-logs. They just flip the "block everything except UK" switch and forget it. That switch is blocking some of your paying customers right now.