Primary keyword: best streaming for football UK
Secondary keywords: Sky Sports football, TNT Sports Discovery+, NOW Sports football, Premier League streaming, EFL Championship streaming
Ask any pub landlord in Sheffield, Cardiff or Glasgow which subscriptions they keep on the bar's smart TV and the answer changes by the week. The honest reason is that English, Welsh and Scottish football is split across more broadcasters than at any point in the modern game, and the patchwork only gets messier once you add the Champions League, the Championship, the Women's Super League and the National League. There is no single "football pass" that covers the lot in 2026, despite what the supermarket aisle ads suggest. This guide takes the view from your sofa, not the boardroom: pick the smallest legal stack that actually shows the matches you care about, and skip the rest. We will work through it fan by fan, with real prices and real fixtures.
Why football is split across multiple UK broadcasters #
The Premier League sells its UK live rights in packages, and the regulator has historically forced the league to spread those packages across competing buyers so no one broadcaster controls everything. That is why a single weekend in February can have one fixture on Sky Sports at 12:30, another on TNT Sports at 17:30, a Sunday match back on Sky and another on Amazon during a midweek round. The Champions League is its own auction, currently held jointly by TNT Sports and Discovery+. The Championship, League One and League Two sell separately again, mostly to Sky and the EFL's own iFollow product. Welsh football lives partly on S4C, Scottish league action lives partly on Sky and partly on free-to-air channels like BBC Scotland and STV, and the Women's Super League sits across Sky and the BBC.
The result is that "watching football" in the UK in 2026 is really "watching the football you actually follow". The wrong question is which service is best overall. The right question is which one stops the bleeding on your bank statement while still showing your team.
Sky Sports — what football is on it #
Sky Sports remains the bedrock of UK football coverage. The Sky Sports Football and Sky Sports Premier League channels carry the bulk of live Premier League fixtures, including most Sunday afternoon kick-offs and Monday Night Football. Sky also holds rights to the EFL Championship, League One, League Two and the Carabao Cup. If you follow a Championship side — Leeds, Sheffield Wednesday, Norwich, Stoke, Plymouth, anyone fighting for or against promotion — Sky is the only mainstream way to watch most of those midweek and Saturday lunchtime games live, alongside iFollow.
Pricing through Sky directly tends to bundle TV with broadband or a Iptv/blog/how-to-set-up-sky-stream-puck/”>Sky Stream Puck. Standalone Sky Sports via a contract typically clears £30 a month once promotional periods end, and that is before broadband. The honest assessment: if you are a Premier League completionist or an EFL follower, Sky Sports is unavoidable.
TNT Sports and Discovery+ — UCL, the Premier League slot, Europa #
TNT Sports (the rebranded BT Sport) carries the UEFA Champions League, the UEFA Europa League and the UEFA Conference League in full. It also holds a Premier League rights package — typically a Saturday lunchtime slot and selected midweek games. For most fans, the appeal of TNT is European football. If your club is in the Champions League and you want to follow every group-stage night, TNT is non-negotiable.
The route most viewers take in 2026 is Discovery+ Premium, which carries the TNT Sports channels as a streaming bundle for a monthly fee that has hovered around £30 a month. There is no free trial, but you can cancel month-to-month, which makes it a much cleaner option than a long Sky contract for fans who only want European nights and the occasional Premier League fixture.
NOW Sports — the day pass option #
NOW (formerly NOW TV) is Sky's no-contract streaming product. The relevant pass for football is the NOW Sports Membership, which carries every Sky Sports channel — including Sky Sports Football and Sky Sports Premier League — as a streaming feed. Pricing is monthly, with frequent promotional rates that drop the first month or three to roughly half the standing price. There is also a 24-hour Sports Day Pass, which is the cheapest legal way in the UK to watch a single live match on Sky.
The day pass is genuinely useful for the casual fan whose team plays on Sky maybe four or five times a season, plus the FA Cup final and a couple of derbies. Buying twelve day passes a year still works out cheaper than even one full year of Sky Sports through a contract.
Amazon Prime — historical and current football slots #
Amazon held a small but well-publicised package of Premier League fixtures during the post-2019 cycles, typically a December midweek round and a Boxing Day round. Whether Amazon still holds Premier League rights in any given season depends on the most recent rights cycle, and the Premier League has in recent years rotated packages between Sky, TNT and the streamers. Amazon Prime Video remains a sensible add-on for the rights it does hold, particularly because it is bundled into the wider Prime subscription rather than priced as a sports-only product.
If you are already paying for Prime for delivery, treat any football fixtures Amazon carries as a bonus rather than a primary route. Do check the current season's announced fixture list rather than assume Amazon will or will not have Premier League games.
iFollow and EFL streaming #
For Championship, League One and League Two fans, iFollow is the league's own streaming product. It does not duplicate matches that Sky has chosen for live broadcast — those are blacked out — but it does carry every other midweek and Saturday 3pm match for clubs in those divisions. The pricing model is per-match (around £10) or a season pass that varies by club. iFollow is run directly by the EFL in partnership with the clubs, so the money goes back into the league rather than to a third-party broadcaster.
A Championship season-ticket holder who can't get to away games is the obvious user. So is an expat watching from abroad, where geo-restrictions are looser than they are inside the UK 3pm Saturday blackout window.
For Sunderland, Norwich, Birmingham, Cardiff City and Swansea fans in particular, iFollow is the difference between watching every away fixture in the season for the price of a season pass and missing half of them entirely. The picture quality has improved across recent seasons — most matches now stream at 1080p with the home club's choice of commentary, and a small number of fixtures carry a multilingual audio track. The platform is also where the play-off semi-final second legs that Sky doesn't pick up land for live UK coverage, which makes iFollow effectively a must-have at the back end of any club's promotion push.
S4C, BBC Scotland and STV — Welsh and Scottish football regional #
Football fans north and west of England are well served by free-to-air. S4C broadcasts a regular Cymru Premier match (the top tier of Welsh club football) and Wales national team fixtures with Welsh-language commentary; the same broadcasts are usually available without a subscription via S4C Clic and BBC iPlayer. BBC Scotland and STV between them cover a generous slice of Scottish Premiership matches, the Scottish Cup and Scotland national team home fixtures. Sky Sports Football carries the rest of the Scottish Premiership for live coverage during the season.
If your loyalty sits with Aberdeen, Hearts, Cardiff, Swansea or Wrexham, the picture looks very different from the Premier League completionist's stack — and considerably cheaper.
Women's Super League — where to watch #
Women's Super League rights are jointly held by Sky and the BBC for the current cycle. Sky carries a slate of WSL matches across its Sky Sports channels (so they show up in NOW Sports too), and the BBC carries a separate weekly match free-to-air on BBC One, BBC Two or BBC iPlayer. WSL coverage on the BBC is one of the cleanest free-to-air football propositions on UK television in 2026: full live matches, no day passes, no add-ons, just iPlayer on the device of your choice.
Lower leagues and non-league streaming #
Below League Two, the picture fragments again. The National League sells its own streaming product, accessed through individual club portals or the league's central platform. The fixture goes live with subscription or pay-per-view depending on the round. Step five and below typically rely on YouTube streams set up by individual clubs — these are the legitimate, club-run channels, not the grey-market mirrors that pop up on social media.
If you follow your local non-league side, the club's official social pages and the National League's own streaming portal are the right starting points. Avoid any "free stream" link aggregator: those routes are not licensed, often inject adware, and have been the subject of legal action against UK consumers in the past.
Pick the cheapest legal route for your fan type #
Premier League completionist who wants every televised match: Sky Sports (or NOW Sports monthly) plus Discovery+ Premium for TNT, plus an Amazon Prime subscription you almost certainly already have. Realistic spend: roughly £55 to £70 a month combined.
EFL Championship follower who wants every match their club plays: Sky Sports plus iFollow for the matches Sky doesn't show. Realistic spend: Sky's monthly cost plus a per-match or season iFollow pass.
Single-club Premier League follower (one team, all season): Either NOW Sports Day Passes for the matches your club plays on Sky, plus Discovery+ for any of your matches that fall on TNT. Skip the months your team has no televised fixtures. This is by far the cheapest legal route for casual single-club fans, often saving over £200 a year against a year-round Sky contract.
Champions League fan only: Discovery+ Premium for the duration of the European campaign. Cancel between matchdays if you want to be ruthless about it.
Scottish Premiership follower: BBC iPlayer plus STV for the free-to-air slice; add NOW Sports if you want the Sky-held Scottish fixtures.
Cymru Premier or Welsh national team fan: S4C Clic and BBC iPlayer cover the bulk of what you'll want for free.
Women's football fan: BBC iPlayer for the weekly free fixture; add NOW Sports if you want the wider Sky-carried slate.
Verdict — best by fan profile #
There is no universal best streaming service for football in the UK because the rights map refuses to consolidate. The closest thing to a default, if you are a hardcore Premier League fan with European interest, is NOW Sports plus Discovery+ Premium, billed monthly so you can cancel during the summer. For everyone else — single-club fans, EFL followers, Welsh and Scottish league supporters, women's football fans — the cheaper and more honest answer is to pick exactly one or two services that match the matches you actually intend to watch, and refuse to pay for the rest.
Can I watch every Premier League game on one service? #
No. Premier League live rights are split each season between Sky Sports, TNT Sports and (in some cycles) Amazon Prime Video, with a small number of fixtures going to free-to-air for cup ties or the FA Cup final. To watch every televised Premier League match in a given season, you need at minimum Sky and TNT (via Discovery+), and you'll still miss the matches that fall in the Saturday 3pm blackout, which by law are not broadcast live in the UK at all.
Is Sky Sports needed for the Champions League? #
No, the UEFA Champions League is on TNT Sports, which streams via Discovery+ Premium. Sky Sports does not carry Champions League fixtures in the current rights cycle. If your only interest is European football, you can skip Sky entirely and subscribe to Discovery+ for the European weeks.
Is NOW Sports day pass cheaper than monthly? #
For very light viewing, yes. A 24-hour Sports Day Pass costs less than a tenth of an annual Sky contract, so if you only watch four or five matches a year a stack of day passes is far cheaper. For more than roughly six matches a month, the monthly NOW Sports Membership becomes the better deal — and the monthly membership has no contract, so you can cancel after the matches you wanted are done.
Where can I stream Championship matches? #
Most Championship matches are on Sky Sports (and therefore NOW Sports) in any given week. The midweek and Saturday 3pm fixtures that Sky doesn't broadcast are available on iFollow, the EFL's own per-match streaming product run with the clubs. Between Sky and iFollow, every Championship fixture played by a club in the league has a legitimate UK route to watch.
Is iFollow legal in the UK? #
Yes. iFollow is operated directly by the English Football League in partnership with its member clubs and is the official streaming product for Championship, League One and League Two matches that fall outside Sky's pick. Saturday 3pm fixtures inside the UK blackout window are still blacked out on iFollow for UK viewers, but that is a legal restriction on broadcasting rather than a problem with iFollow itself.
Disclosure: best-iptv-uk.com only recommends licensed UK streaming services. Pricing is indicative and subject to change at the broadcaster's discretion. Always confirm current rights and fixture broadcasters at the start of each season.
