How to Watch the 2026 World Cup for Free or Cheap

Key Takeaways

- Tubi streams the opening ceremony and two early matches free, including USA vs. Paraguay on June 12
- VPNs unlock free international broadcasts on BBC iPlayer, ITVX, and SBS On Demand
- Fox One offers a three-day trial and costs $20/month for all 104 matches
The 2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off today. Matches will run across 16 venues in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico through the final on July 19. A record 48 teams will compete in 104 matches over more than five weeks. That's a lot of soccer to figure out how to watch.
In the U.S., Fox and FS1 carry English broadcasts. Telemundo and Universo handle Spanish coverage. If you have cable or a live TV streaming service with these channels, you're set. If you don't, the options range from genuinely free to moderately expensive.
Free Options: What Actually Works
No U.S. streaming service offers free coverage for the entire tournament. But you can piece together options depending on which matches matter most to you.
Tubi's Free Games
Tubi will stream the opening ceremony and two early matches at no cost: Mexico vs. South Africa on June 11 and the U.S. vs. Paraguay on June 12. After that, you'll need to look elsewhere.
VPN to International Free Broadcasts
Several countries offer free-to-air World Cup coverage. BBC iPlayer and ITVX in the UK, plus SBS On Demand in Australia, are solid options. You'll need a VPN to access them from the U.S.
FIFA clearly knows this is happening. ExpressVPN is an official FIFA partner for the 2026 World Cup and is running tournament promotions. When FIFA itself partners with a VPN provider, the wink is hard to miss.
Over-the-Air Antenna
Fox broadcasts over the air in most markets. You'll need a digital antenna and decent reception. Check the FCC's DTV coverage map to see what signal strength is available at your address. Antennas run $20 to $50 for a decent indoor model.
Streaming Services Compared
If free options don't cover what you need, here's what each streaming service offers for World Cup coverage.
| Service | Monthly Cost | Free Trial | Channels |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fox One | $20 | 3 days | All Fox/FS1 matches |
| YouTube TV | $68 (full) / $55 (sports) | 10 days | Fox, FS1, Telemundo, Universo |
| Hulu + Live TV | $90 | 3 days | Fox, FS1, Telemundo, Universo |
| DirecTV Stream | $50 | 5 days | Fox, FS1, Telemundo, Universo |
| Fubo TV | $46 (promo) | 5 days | Fox, FS1, Telemundo, Universo |
| Peacock | $11 | None | Telemundo (Spanish only) |
Fox One: The Cheapest Dedicated Option
Fox One is Fox's streaming service. It carries every match. The three-day free trial is short, but at $20/month, it's the cheapest paid option if you only care about English-language World Cup coverage and don't need a full live TV package.
YouTube TV: Best for Sports Fans
YouTube TV currently offers a 10-day free trial, the longest of any major service. The full package runs $68/month, or $55 for a sports-focused plan. You get Fox, FS1, Telemundo, and Universo in most markets.
Peacock: Spanish Coverage Only
Peacock carries every match via Telemundo with Spanish commentary. It costs $11/month. If you have an Instacart+ or Walmart+ subscription, Peacock Premium is included free.
The Trial-Stacking Strategy
Reddit's r/soccer community has been workshopping cord-cutting strategies. The most popular approach: stack free trials across services to cover different phases of the tournament.
Start with Tubi for the opening matches. Use YouTube TV's 10-day trial for the group stage. Switch to DirecTV Stream's 5-day trial for the Round of 16. Finish with Fox One's 3-day trial or a single paid month for the knockout rounds.
This requires creating multiple accounts and timing cancellations carefully. But for viewers who want maximum coverage at minimum cost, it works.
VPN Technical Considerations
HackerNews threads have focused on VPN reliability for live sports. The main concerns: latency spikes during high-traffic matches and connection drops mid-game.
For streaming BBC iPlayer or ITVX, you'll want a VPN with UK server locations and enough bandwidth for HD video. Most premium VPNs handle this fine. Free VPNs typically don't.
One technical note: some streaming services actively block VPN traffic. BBC iPlayer and ITVX have been less aggressive about this than U.S. services. But expect some trial and error finding a server that works.
Logicity's Take
Key Dates to Plan Around
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I watch the 2026 World Cup completely free?
Partially. Tubi streams the opening ceremony and two early matches free. OTA antenna gets Fox broadcasts free. VPNs unlock free international coverage on BBC iPlayer and similar services. But no single free option covers all 104 matches.
What's the cheapest way to watch every World Cup match?
Fox One at $20/month is the cheapest paid option for full English coverage. Combined with a free trial period, you can cover the entire tournament for under $40.
Which streaming service has the longest free trial?
YouTube TV offers a 10-day free trial. DirecTV Stream and Fubo TV offer 5 days each. Fox One and Hulu + Live TV offer 3 days.
Is using a VPN to watch the World Cup legal?
VPN use is legal in the U.S. and most countries. However, it may violate streaming services' terms of service. FIFA's partnership with ExpressVPN suggests they're not actively opposing this practice.
How can I watch the World Cup in Spanish?
Telemundo and Universo carry Spanish broadcasts. Peacock streams all matches via Telemundo for $11/month. Instacart+ and Walmart+ subscribers get Peacock free.
If you're streaming 4K World Cup matches, make sure your setup can handle the load
Need Help Implementing This?
Source: Lifehacker
Manaal Khan
Tech & Innovation Writer
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