Three days. That is all that stands between now and the opening whistle in Mexico City. If you have not figured out where you are watching yet, this is your guide. The good news is you have more options than any previous World Cup. Cable, streaming, free over-the-air, Spanish language, 4K. Everything is covered. The question is which setup works best for you. Where Does the 2026 World Cup Air in the USA? Two broadcasters. FOX Sports owns the English rights. Telemundo handles Spanish. The world cup 2026 splits across FOX and FS1 for English viewers. FOX gets the premium matches—70 games including every USMNT fixture, the big knockouts, and the July 19 Final. FS1 fills in the rest with 34 group stage games. Spanish coverage works the same way. Telemundo takes 92 matches, Universo handles 12. Every single game lands on one of those two channels. If you already have cable or satellite, you are set. Every match is on channels you already pay for. What Are the Streaming Options? No cable? No problem. Several options cover the full tournament. FOX One covers everything in English. Every single game available to stream live or catch later on demand. It costs $19.99 a month. There is a deal running right now — three months for $40 if you commit through the end of the tournament. Free trial runs for seven days. YouTube TV bundles FOX, FS1, Telemundo, and Universo together. That covers every match in both English and Spanish. First five months run $67.99, then $82.99 after. Twenty-one days free to try it out. DirecTV’s Entertainment plan gets you FOX, FS1, and Telemundo. First month is $59.99. Five days free before you commit. Fubo subscribers are sorted. FOX, FS1, and Telemundo come included in the package. Households watching in Spanish […]
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