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Canal GOAT is a Brazilian sports broadcaster you watch completely free of charge. It runs as an ad-supported FAST service and streams on YouTube (@canalgoatbr), the Samsung TV Plus and Movieark channels, and Kick. There is no subscription and no paid tier of any kind. The schedule mixes Brazil’s Série B and Série D and the state championships with Portuguese-language coverage of the Bundesliga, the Saudi Pro League, the Scottish Premiership, Japan’s J-League and the NWSL. Video runs up to 1080p. The full catalogue, however, is locked to Brazil. From anywhere else, you open the free stream with {topVpn} set to a Brazilian server. We currently cover {availableCount} countries where you can reach this no-cost broadcast.
CazéTV is a Brazilian sports streaming channel you can watch completely free of charge. It launched in November 2022 from an idea by streamer Casimiro Miguel, known to fans as Cazé, together with the Rio de Janeiro sports marketing company LiveMode. Today LiveMode owns the channel outright, while Casimiro stays on as its star host. The bulk of the broadcasting happens on YouTube, backed by a round the clock channel on Samsung TV Plus, LG Channels, TCL Channel and Mercado Play. The lineup carries all 104 matches of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, the Brasileirão, Libertadores and the Europa League. Commentary is in Portuguese only, the 2026 World Cup streams in up to 4K while the regular schedule runs in Full HD, and subtitles plus audio description are available. Rights cover Brazil alone, so live coverage is blocked from elsewhere.
Combate is the Brazilian combat-sports channel owned by Grupo Globo. It carries live MMA, kickboxing, boxing, muay thai and jiu-jitsu, including leagues such as PFL, ONE Championship and Jungle Fight. You can watch it through Combate Play and the Globoplay plus Combate combo on globo.com, or as pay-per-view via Brazilian pay-TV operators. The programming is in Portuguese, available only inside Brazil, in 1080p Full HD with no HDR.
Premiere is the premium pay-per-view football channel run by Brazil’s Grupo Globo, based in Rio de Janeiro. The service carries hundreds of live matches each season, from Campeonato Brasileiro Série A and Série B to the Copa do Brasil and state championships like Carioca, Mineiro and Gaúcho. You watch it through Globoplay or local carriers. It streams pure live Brazilian football in Full HD, available only inside Brazil.
SportyNet+ is the premium pay-per-view tier of the Brazilian sports channel SportyNet, which carried the name Nosso Futebol until July 2025. The channel is now owned by the African company Sporty Group and leans heavily into football. Its headline property is Brasileirao Serie B across the 2026 and 2027 seasons, running officially from 6 March 2026 with at least 76 matches per campaign. Alongside it sit Serie C, Copa do Nordeste, state leagues such as Catarinense, Mineiro and Alagoano, women’s competitions and futsal, plus a European slate of Bundesliga, Coppa Italia and the European League of Football. Broadcasts come in 1080p HD with Portuguese commentary. SportyNet reaches viewers through Brazilian pay-TV operators Sky, Claro tv+, DGO and Vivo TV, with selected live matches shown free on the YouTube channel @SportyNetBrasil. The SportyNet+ tier needs a Brazilian pay-TV account and is geo-restricted to Brazil.
DAZN is a sports-first streaming service built to compete with traditional pay-TV sports channels. The schedule shifts dramatically from country to country: in Germany it carries the Bundesliga and Champions League matches, in Italy it owns the majority of Serie A, in Japan it runs baseball and boxing. The global side of DAZN remains its combat sports division, where it has become one of the biggest buyers of marquee boxing pay-per-view events.
Netflix didn’t invent streaming but it set the rules everyone else now plays by. With 325 million paying subscribers across 190 countries and a stable of shows like Squid Game, Stranger Things and Wednesday, it still defines what mainstream streaming looks like. Recent pushes into live sports and ad-supported plans show the company is willing to bend its own playbook when the market demands it.
Max is Warner Bros. Discovery’s attempt to keep everything important in one app: HBO’s prestige catalogue, the DC Universe, Warner Bros. theatrical slate and the reality-heavy Discovery library. The product still leans on HBO’s reputation for Sunday-night event TV (Succession, The Last of Us, House of the Dragon) but the expanded library means there is something for almost every household.
Apple TV+ takes the opposite approach to almost everyone else: no licensed back catalogue, only original productions. The result is a comparatively small library where misses are rare and hits like Ted Lasso, Severance, Slow Horses and For All Mankind have picked up Emmys. A single tier covers 4K HDR with Dolby Atmos, and the service is bundled into Apple One for households already invested in the Apple ecosystem.
Prime Video lives inside the wider Prime bundle, so streaming is only part of what you’re paying for. The content mix is unusual: splashy originals (The Boys, The Rings of Power, Reacher) sit next to a huge catalogue of movies available to rent or buy and a growing set of optional add-on Channels. Prime has also turned into a heavyweight in live sports, from Thursday Night Football to Champions League in select markets.
Paramount+ gathers the Paramount Pictures film vault, CBS prime-time drama, Nickelodeon kids programming and MTV reality into one subscription. The backbone is Taylor Sheridan’s growing slate of originals (the Yellowstone spin-offs 1923 and Lawman: Bass Reeves, plus Tulsa King), with Star Trek carrying the sci-fi side and South Park providing the decades-old evergreen. In select regions the service also carries NFL games and UEFA Champions League, blurring the line with traditional sports packages.
Disney+ is the one place where Disney, Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars and National Geographic sit alongside the general-entertainment hub Star. It launched globally in November 2019 and reached the Czech Republic in June 2022. Most markets now offer three tiers: an ad-supported entry plan plus the ad-free Standard (Full HD) and Premium (4K HDR with Dolby Atmos), while a few countries such as the Czech Republic keep only the two ad-free plans. Annual billing trims roughly two months off the yearly cost.
EuroLeague TV is the official streaming home of European basketball, operated by the league itself through Euroleague Ventures, an IMG partnership run out of Barcelona. The service carries every Turkish Airlines EuroLeague and BKT EuroCup game live and on demand, plus a deep archive of classic encounters and a round-the-clock EL 24/7 channel. There are some hard limits to know about. Coverage is fully blacked out in Spain, Italy, the United Kingdom, the United States and Canada, where FloSports holds North American rights. German club matches air on a delay, with MagentaSport carrying them live, and France got the platform back as the primary route in March 2026. Access comes as an annual Season Pass.
FIAWEC+ is the official streaming home of the FIA World Endurance Championship, the global stage for long-distance motorsport. It is run jointly by the championship and the Automobile Club de l’Ouest, the ACO in Le Mans, France, which means the feeds come straight from the people behind the racing. The service carries every WEC session and the complete 24 Hours of Le Mans, with onboard cameras, Live Timing Pro and a multi-season archive on top. You also get WEC Originals and the behind-the-scenes WEC Insider documentaries, all in crisp 1080p HD. There is no built-in smart-TV app, but Chromecast and AirPlay push it to the big screen.
FIFA+ is FIFA’s free, ad-supported football platform, and since June 2026 it lives inside DAZN after the standalone FIFA+ app was retired. At no cost it opens up the complete men’s and women’s World Cup archive, the original FIFA+ documentaries, and, in selected territories, thousands of live grassroots, women’s and lower-division matches. Note that FIFA+ does not carry the main 2026 World Cup fixtures, which stay with national broadcasters.
MotoGP VideoPass is the official streaming service of the road racing world championship, operated by Dorna Sports (renamed MotoGP Sports Entertainment Group in 2026, majority-owned by Liberty Media and headquartered in Madrid). It carries every MotoGP, Moto2, Moto3 and MotoE session live, from practice and qualifying through sprints to the races themselves, across all 22 Grands Prix of the 2026 season. A six-angle Multifeed lets you switch between camera views, including onboard shots, while Multiview stacks several feeds on one screen and a deep archive reaches back to 1992. Everything streams in 1080p on the web, mobiles, tablets, and the major connected-TV platforms.
NWSL+ is the National Women’s Soccer League’s own free, ad-supported streaming app, built on Endeavor Streaming technology. Sign up with an email and you can watch live matches, replays and highlights from every game across more than 130 countries. The 2026 season grew to 16 teams, including new clubs Denver Summit FC and Boston Legacy FC. In the United States many marquee fixtures sit with partners like Prime Video and ESPN, so NWSL+ carries only the leftover live games at home. A VPN simply changes your location.
The Inner Circle is the official streaming home of ONE Championship, the Singapore-based Asian combat promotion run by Group ONE Holdings. It carries live cards across MMA, Muay Thai, kickboxing and submission grappling, including the Friday-night ONE Friday Fights from Bangkok’s Lumpinee Stadium, ONE Fight Night events, numbered shows, plus replays and a deep archive. As of June 2026 it runs as a global subscription. Be aware that the platform applies strict VPN checks at purchase and during playback, and blacks out events where local broadcasters hold the live rights, so what you can watch live depends on the country you connect from.
Rally.TV is the official streaming home of the FIA World Rally Championship, operated by Germany’s WRC Promoter. It started life in 2014 as WRC+ and took on its current name in August 2023. Alongside the WRC itself you get the European Rally Championship, World Rallycross and the support classes WRC2, WRC3 and Junior WRC. Every special stage runs live, backed by real-time GPS tracking, onboard cameras from every car, condensed highlights and a deep archive. The 2026 season spans fourteen rounds. It works on the web, iOS, Android, Apple TV, Android TV, Fire TV and Chromecast, plus there’s a free ad-supported channel, Rally.TV FAST+, on Samsung TV Plus, LG Channels, Rakuten TV and Pluto TV.
RugbyPass TV is World Rugby’s own free, ad-supported streaming service, run out of the governing body’s Dublin headquarters and launched back in August 2023, a fortnight before that year’s World Cup kicked off. There’s no fee at all; you just create a free account and start watching. The catalogue spans the men’s and women’s Rugby World Cup, WXV, the Pacific Nations Cup, the U20 Championship and HSBC SVNS sevens plus qualifiers, topped up with more than 10,000 hours of archive and World Rugby Studios originals. One catch: individual fixtures get blacked out wherever a local broadcaster holds the rights, such as Stan in Australia or Peacock in the States.
Tennis TV is the official live streaming home of the ATP Tour, men’s professional tennis, run by ATP Media out of Wimbledon in London. It carries every ATP Masters 1000, ATP 500 and ATP 250 event, plus the Nitto ATP Finals and the Next Gen ATP Finals, adding up to more than 2,500 matches a year and over 40,000 hours of replays in the archive. One subscription works across 200 plus territories, everything streams in HD, and a spoiler-free mode keeps results hidden until you press play. What you won’t find here are the four Grand Slams or the women’s WTA tour.
TrillerTV, the service once known as FITE, is a global home for combat sports and professional wrestling. It carries boxing, including the bare-knuckle promotion BKFC, which it streams exclusively, alongside MMA and the striking action of Muay Thai and kickboxing through GLORY. Wrestling fans get GCW, NJPW, TNA, MLW and ROH, most of it live as it happens. The platform runs more than 1,000 live events a year. Operated by Flipps Media under Triller Group, it is available almost anywhere, though individual cards can carry regional blackouts. You choose how to watch: a free ad-supported tier, the TrillerTV+ subscription, or a one-off pay-per-view.
UEFA.tv is UEFA’s official free streaming service, available worldwide once you create a free account. Be clear on one thing: the big live games (Champions League, Europa League, the Euros) are not shown live here, only post-match highlights. What you can watch live for free are the youth competitions (U17, U19, U21 and the Youth League), selected women’s football, futsal and the live draws, alongside an archive of classic finals, documentaries and magazine shows. The 2024 revamp brought DVR, picture-in-picture and offline downloads in up to 1080p.
WTA TV is the Women’s Tennis Association’s own paid streaming subscription, running under WTA Ventures since 2017. It carries live WTA Tour action, from the WTA 1000, 500 and 250 tournaments through to the season-ending WTA Finals, plus replays and multi-court viewing. What it does not offer is the four Grand Slams, the men’s ATP Tour or Olympic tennis. In the major Western markets a local broadcaster holds the rights, so WTA TV is really the option for the rest of the world. Only the WTA 125 tier streams free.