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Premier League 2025-26 streaming: every match, every region

Where to watch every Premier League match in 2025-26 by country (Sky, NBC, Canal+, beIN, Optus, Paramount+), the 3pm blackout problem, and where IPTV fits.

IPTV· StreamEliteMay 18, 202611 min read

The Premier League is the most watched football competition on earth and the most fragmented to actually follow. The 2025–26 season is broadcast by a different rights holder in almost every country, with overlapping packages, blackout windows, and price tiers that shift mid-season. This is the practical map of where every match lives, in every region, with the costs and the catches.

If you've ever opened a Saturday afternoon thinking you'd just “put the football on” and ended up signing up for three different services in two weeks, this is for you.

United Kingdom — Sky, TNT, Amazon, and the 3pm blackout

UK rights for 2025–26 split four ways:

  • Sky Sports — most matches (~128 across the season), available via Sky Stream, Sky Q satellite, or NOW (the streaming-only product). NOW Sports Month Pass: £34.99/mo flexible, or £25/mo on a 6-month commitment.
  • TNT Sports (formerly BT Sport) — ~52 matches including the 12:30 Saturday kick-off slot. Available standalone (£30.99/mo) or bundled via Discovery+ Premium.
  • Amazon Prime Video — 20 matches, concentrated in midweek December and the Boxing Day round. Bundled with Prime (£8.99/mo or £95/year).
  • BBC iPlayer — highlights via Match of the Day, Saturday 22:30. Free with TV licence.

The asterisk: the famous 3pm Saturday blackout still exists in 2026. Matches kicking off between 14:45 and 17:15 UK time on Saturdays are not broadcast live in the UK (the 1960s-era rule designed to protect lower-league attendance). Even with Sky + TNT + Amazon, you can't legally stream those matches inside the UK. Many UK fans use a foreign feed (US, EU, Asian broadcasters) via IPTV for the blackout slot specifically.

United States — NBC's wall-to-wall package

The US is the easiest market: NBC Sports holds every single match. The full package costs $7.99/mo on Peacock Premium with ads, or $13.99/mo without ads. About 175 matches per season are exclusive to Peacock; the high-profile slots (top six clashes, every team's opener) air on USA Network and the main NBC channel, included in any pay-TV bundle or via Peacock.

No blackouts. Spanish-language broadcasts via Telemundo and Universo are included with Peacock. The only catch: kick-off times. The classic Saturday 3pm UK slot lands at 10am Eastern, 7am Pacific. Build a coffee habit.

France — Canal+ keeps the crown

Canal+ holds Premier League rights in France through the 2027–28 season. All 380 matches are available on Canal+ Sport, included in:

  • Canal+ Le Pack (with sport): 25.99 € /mois engagement 24 mois, ou 49.99 € /mois sans engagement
  • Canal+ Sport en streaming: tarifs équivalents via myCanal, regardable sur tous appareils

Aucune option à la carte plus économique en France — Canal+ a un monopole de fait. C'est le marché européen où les fans paient le plus cher au prorata par match.

Spain — Movistar Plus, with DAZN on the side

Spain runs split rights. Movistar Plus+ Liga de Campeones carries the bulk of Premier League fixtures, with select matches on DAZN España.

  • Movistar Plus+ paquete Liga + UCL: 34 €/mes
  • DAZN: 19,99 €/mes plan flexible

A Spanish household wanting full EPL coverage realistically pays ~55 €/mes across both. The Liga MX broadcast feed on Movistar is the best-rated commentary track in Spanish — even Mexicans and Argentinians sometimes prefer it to ESPN Latin America.

Mexico, Latin America, Spanish North America

Paramount+ holds Premier League rights across Mexico and most of Latin America. ~$4.99–$8.99 USD/month depending on country, with all 380 matches in Spanish (Telemundo feed) or English (NBC feed). The best deal in the region by a wide margin.

In Argentina specifically, ESPN Argentina also carries a subset of matches as part of standard cable. Brazil airs the league via ESPN Brasil and Star+.

MENA and Morocco — beIN owns the territory

beIN Sports Arabic holds Premier League rights across the MENA region (Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, the entire Gulf). Two ways to access:

  • beIN Connect (streaming, OTT): roughly 70 USD/mo through official subscription, often available cheaper via licensed regional resellers in Morocco/Tunisia (~250 DH/mo / ~150 TND/mo)
  • beIN Sports via Maroc Telecom Box or Canal+ Maroc: bundled into premium TV packages at ~200–300 DH/mo

Commentary is in Arabic by default with optional English audio track on the OTT product. For viewers who specifically want UK commentary (Martin Tyler, Peter Drury), only the OTT product offers the secondary feed reliably.

Australia — Optus Sport, exclusive

Optus Sport holds 100% of Premier League rights in Australia through 2028. $24.99 AUD/mo standalone, or free for Optus mobile/broadband subscribers on certain plans. Every match, every weekend, with a strong dedicated Australian commentary team. Probably the cleanest non-UK setup in the English-speaking world.

Asia-Pacific — region-by-region

  • India: JioHotstar (Disney+ Hotstar successor) — ~399 INR/mo with sport plan
  • Singapore + Malaysia: StarHub / Astro — bundled with pay-TV
  • Japan: SPOTV NOW — ~2,100 JPY/mo
  • China: Migu Video / Tencent Sport, with unpredictable streaming reliability
  • Thailand: TrueVisions / TrueID — Premier League moved here from CTH in 2024

The big problem: travel

Any of these subscriptions is geo-locked to its country of purchase. A UK Sky Sports subscription doesn't work in Spain. A US Peacock subscription stops working when you fly to Paris. Expats are the largest single group searching for IPTV solutions because the official broadcaster in their home country doesn't recognize their new address.

VPNs work for some services but are increasingly blocked by Sky, DAZN, and Peacock specifically. IPTV bypasses this entire problem by carrying the channels themselves rather than impersonating a local subscriber.

Where IPTV fits in

A good IPTV subscription carries all the broadcaster feeds above in a single login: Sky Sports Premier League, TNT Sports 1-4, beIN Sports 1-4 (Arabic + French commentary), NBC, Telemundo, Canal+ Sport, Movistar Liga, Optus Sport, the lot. Live, with EPG, in HD or 4K depending on the source.

The practical use cases people actually have:

  • A UK fan who wants the 3pm Saturday match (workaround for the domestic blackout)
  • A French fan who refuses to pay Canal+'s 50€/mo and wants the UK feed instead
  • A US fan who specifically wants UK commentary instead of NBC studio coverage
  • A Moroccan fan who wants UK + French + Arabic commentary on the same match, switchable in two clicks
  • An expat watching their home country's broadcast feed from anywhere on earth

Cost-wise, a 6- or 12-month IPTV subscription typically lands between £25 and £40/mo equivalent globally (much less in Morocco / Maghreb at ~30 DH/mo effective). Compare to £75/mo for Sky + TNT in the UK, $14/mo for Peacock alone in the US, 50€/mo for Canal+ in France. The cheaper option is also the most flexible — same subscription works in every country.

The honest tradeoffs

Live football streaming via IPTV depends on the provider's infrastructure, not your home internet alone. A 2 Mbps blip at kick-off won't bother a Sky satellite box, but it can ruin an IPTV feed. The fix is picking a provider with redundant servers (Paris, Frankfurt, London — multiple endpoints to fall back to) rather than the cheapest available.

And expect occasional channel drops on the biggest matches — Liverpool–Manchester United on a Sunday afternoon stresses every IPTV server on earth. Reputable providers warn you in advance and offer alternate feeds. Cheaper services don't, and you find out at 17:31 when the screen freezes.

Quick lookup table

  • UK: Sky NOW (£25–35/mo) + TNT Sports (£30.99/mo) + Amazon Prime (£8.99/mo). Total: ~£75/mo.
  • USA: Peacock Premium ($7.99 or $13.99/mo).
  • France: Canal+ Sport pack (25.99–49.99 €/mo).
  • Spain: Movistar + DAZN (~55 €/mo).
  • Mexico / LatAm: Paramount+ ($4.99–$8.99/mo).
  • MENA / Morocco: beIN Connect (~70 USD/mo official, ~250 DH/mo via licensed resellers).
  • Australia: Optus Sport ($24.99 AUD/mo).
  • Anywhere, any feed, single login: IPTV (£25–40/mo equivalent globally, ~30 DH/mo effective in Morocco).

Pick the broadcaster if you're a single-country fan who wants the local commentary and doesn't mind paying premium. Pick IPTV if you want optionality — multiple commentary tracks, no blackouts, travel-proof, and a price that doesn't scale with the number of competitions you watch.

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