A short relatable scenario: a customer signs up on the 15th of the month. Their subscription renews on the 15th of every month. Then they upgrade on the 22nd. Their renewal date changes. Now they're confused. Here's the thing—anchor date logic is subtle. The default in most panels is to reset the anchor date on any plan change. That's technically correct but customer-hostile. A good British IPTV panel lets you choose: preserve original anchor date (so customers always renew on the same day) or reset on changes (proration-based). A panel that resets without warning is a panel that guarantees confusion. Let me describe what resetting anchor dates costs. A British IPTV reseller named Tom's panel resets anchor date on every plan change. A customer upgrades mid-month. Their renewal date changes from the 15th to the 22nd. They expect to be billed on the 15th. They miss the 22nd. They are suspended. They complain. An IPTV Reseller Panel with anchor date options lets Tom keep the original anchor date. The upgrade is prorated, but renewal stays on the 15th. The customer expects it. They pay on time. No confusion. What actually works is asking your panel provider: "Does plan change reset the anchor date? Can I prevent that?" The pattern that keeps showing up among British IPTV resellers with low billing confusion is that their panels preserve original anchor dates. Customers always know when they'll be billed. I've watched a reseller named Sarah's panel reset anchor dates on every change. She received monthly complaints about unexpected billing dates. She switched to a panel that preserves anchor dates. Complaints dropped by 90%. That said, preserving anchor dates requires proration logic that handles upgrades and downgrades gracefully. A good British IPTV panel calculates the prorated amount for the current period, then resumes normal billing on the original anchor date. The best panels show customers exactly what will happen before they confirm the plan change. If your panel's anchor date logic is hidden and resetting, your customers will be surprised. Honestly, the resellers who ignore anchor dates are the ones whose customers complain about "unexpected" charges. An IPTV Reseller Panel that respects customer predictability will preserve anchor dates. Here's a final scenario. A British IPTV reseller named Marcus's panel reset anchor dates. A customer upgraded, their billing date changed, they missed the new date, and they were suspended during a match. They cancelled. Marcus switched to a panel that preserves anchor dates. Marcus says: "Predictable billing is a feature. My new panel gets that." Your British IPTV panel's anchor date logic is not a minor accounting detail. It is customer predictability. Preserve it.