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The free football streaming sites that are still standing

A Samsung smart TV resting on a wooden media console in a living room, screen displaying a football match streaming app i

Free football streaming had a rough few days right before this World Cup.

TVPass and TheTVApp both went dark on June 6, and Europol pulled more than 27,000 illegal streaming links offline just as the tournament kicked off.

If you have been searching for free football streaming sites, the landscape looks a little different than it did a month ago.

Here is what is actually working right now, the licensed side and the informal side, without pretending either one is simple.

TL;DR: TVPass and TheTVApp both went down on June 6, and Operation Kratos 2 pulled over 27,000 illegal streaming URLs offline days before the World Cup. Pluto TV, Tubi, BBC iPlayer, FIFA+, and several national broadcasters still cover a surprising amount of football for free, though most are geo-restricted. The unofficial sites cord cutters search for next, like DaddyLive and SportSurge, sit in the same enforcement zone that just took down TVPass.

Where free football streaming actually stands right now

Free football streaming splits into two groups in 2026: licensed broadcasters that include football in a free tier, and an unofficial layer of sites football fans have used for years without holding any broadcast rights.

The table below covers 20 of the most searched names in both categories, with what each one actually carries and where it works.

Sixteen of these are licensed and geo-restricted to specific countries. The other four operate without rights and are named here only because they come up constantly in football streaming searches, not as a recommendation.

SiteTypeFootball coverageAvailabilityNotes
BBC iPlayerFree, licence requiredPremier League highlights, FA Cup, World CupUK onlyNeeds a valid TV licence
ITVXFree, account requiredWorld Cup, FA CupUK onlyFree registration
RTE PlayerFreeWorld Cup, all matchesIrelandMinimal login for most content
SBS On DemandFree, account requiredWorld Cup, all matches, A-LeagueAustraliaFree registration
Pluto TVFree, ad supportedUEFA Champions League channel, World Cup pop up channelUS, parts of Europe and Latin AmericaNo account needed
TubiFree, ad supportedWorld Cup opener, USMNT match, CONCACAFUSNo account needed
Samsung TV PlusFree, ad supportedSports adjacent channels, some footballGlobal on Samsung devicesNo account needed
FIFA+FreeClassic matches, documentaries, smaller competitionsGlobalFree account
CazeTV on YouTubeFreeWorld Cup, all matchesBrazilGoogle account, geo-restricted
NOS / NPO StartFreeWorld Cup, all matchesNetherlandsNo account needed
RaiPlayFree, account requiredWorld Cup, 35 of 104 matchesItalyFree registration
M6+ (6play)Free, account requiredWorld Cup, 54 of 104 matchesFranceFree registration
ARD and ZDF MediathekFreeWorld Cup, selected matchesGermanyNo account needed
RTVE PlayFreeWorld Cup, Spain matches plus marquee fixturesSpainNo account needed
ABEMAFreeWorld Cup, all matchesJapanFree email signup
YouTube official channelsFreeLeague highlights and replaysGlobalGoogle account
DaddyLive HDUnlicensedWide football coverage including major leaguesGlobal, domain changes oftenNo broadcast rights held
SportSurgeUnlicensed aggregatorFootball and multi sport linksGlobalAggregates third party streams
StreamEastUnlicensedFootball and multi sportGlobal, frequent domain changesHeavily ad supported
TV GardenUnlicensed IPTV aggregatorMixed channels, some footballGlobal, availability variesLinks to publicly listed IPTV streams

The geo restriction is the part most lists skip over. A free stream in the Netherlands or Brazil simply will not load from the UK or India, no matter how good the connection is.

The best free options for Europe’s big leagues

Pluto TV carries a 24/7 UEFA Champions League channel run by CBS Sports, mixing full match replays with highlight programming.

I left it running one evening expecting background noise and ended up watching most of a 2019 semi-final replay before realizing how much time had passed.

BBC iPlayer covers selected FA Cup matches each round, with Discovery+ picking up the remaining fixtures behind a subscription.

FIFA+ leans toward archive matches, documentaries, and smaller competitions rather than live Premier League or La Liga football, so treat it as a supplement.

Samsung TV Plus is easy to overlook, but if you already own a Samsung TV or Galaxy phone, it adds a free layer of sports adjacent channels with no setup at all.

Free World Cup coverage, country by country

The 2026 World Cup is the most widely free tournament in years, but every free option is locked to its broadcast country.

The Netherlands has the simplest setup. NOS streams all 104 matches free on NPO Start with no login and no account of any kind.

Brazil’s CazeTV does something similar on YouTube, covering every match free with just a Google account, though it stays geo-restricted to Brazil.

The UK, Ireland, and Australia also get the full tournament free, through BBC iPlayer and ITVX, RTE Player, and SBS On Demand.

Germany, France, Italy, Spain, and Portugal each have partial free coverage through their public broadcasters, usually prioritizing marquee fixtures and their own team’s games.

India is the notable gap. As of kickoff, no Indian broadcaster had confirmed free streaming rights, with JioHotstar, SonyLIV, and FanCode all sitting out or still negotiating.

For the full country by country breakdown with match counts and account requirements, DigitBin’s FIFA World Cup streaming guide covers all 15 verified options.

Where cord cutters go when these sites disappear

TVPass and TheTVApp both went offline on June 6, and what happened in the hours after says a lot about where cord cutters look when a free option vanishes.

Reports of the TVPass shutdown spread through Reddit’s r/Piracy community within hours and reached sports forums the same morning.

One Phantasy Tour user asked where everyone would go next, and a TigerDroppings sports thread asked the same day whether anyone knew a free alternative for MLB.

The TheTVApp shutdown happened in the same window, alongside a third related service called TVPlans, and all three lost their shared Discord server at the same time.

That combination, no warning, no backup domain, and no Discord, made this outage feel different from the usual domain hopping these services go through.

The timing lines up with a much larger enforcement action. Europol coordinated Operation Kratos 2, a seven month investigation across 13 countries that pulled over 27,000 illegal streaming URLs offline right as the World Cup began.

Investigators targeted shared backend infrastructure rather than individual apps, which is why unrelated looking services tend to go dark together.

Names that keep coming up in football streaming searches, like DaddyLive HD, SportSurge, StreamEast, and TV Garden, sit in this same unlicensed space and carry the same exposure.

None of them hold broadcast rights to any football competition, and a Flare cybersecurity report found illegal World Cup streaming activity organizing on Telegram and Discord weeks before the tournament started.

The risk that report documents sits mostly in the surrounding ad infrastructure, the aggressive redirects and pop-ups that are a known vector for malware during major tournaments.

None of this is a recommendation either way. It is simply what the pattern shows about where these sites sit and what tends to happen to them.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it illegal to use sites like DaddyLive or SportSurge?

These sites do not hold broadcast rights, so streaming through them carries legal and security risk depending on where you live, and enforcement has typically targeted the operators rather than individual viewers.

Why did TVPass and TheTVApp shut down on the same day?

Both services shared backend infrastructure with a third service called TVPlans, and all three went offline together on June 6 along with their shared Discord.

Is the World Cup free to watch everywhere?

No. The UK, Ireland, Australia, the Netherlands, and Brazil get all 104 matches free, while countries like Germany, France, and Italy get partial coverage, and India had no confirmed free option as of kickoff.

Does Pluto TV show live football?

Pluto TV runs a 24/7 UEFA Champions League channel from CBS Sports plus a temporary World Cup channel, both free and ad supported with no account needed.

What happens if a site like DaddyLive goes down?

Based on the pattern from Operation Kratos 2 and the TVPass shutdown, these services often resurface under new domains, but enforcement increasingly targets the shared infrastructure behind them, so replacements tend to carry the same risk.

The pattern worth remembering before the next kickoff

Free football streaming in 2026 is genuinely better than it gets credit for, if you happen to be in the right country.

Pluto TV, FIFA+, and a handful of public broadcasters cover more matches than most people realize, and none of it requires a sketchy download.

The unofficial side of this list will keep existing in some form. That has been true for a decade.

But Operation Kratos 2 and the TVPass shutdown both landed in the same week for a reason, and whatever replaces them next is likely sitting on the same kind of shared infrastructure, which is the part that tends to disappear first.

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