PSG and Bayern Munich meet in the second leg of their 2025/26 UEFA Champions League semifinal on Wednesday, May 6, at Allianz Arena in Munich, with kickoff set for 3 p.m. ET (12 noon PT).
The match carries a place in the final at stake and will be shown in the United States on CBS and via Paramount+, with additional U.S. coverage on TUDN USA, DAZN USA, Univisión and Vix; the game can also be streamed on fubo. AS USA will run live-text coverage beginning about 90 minutes before kickoff.
This is the second-leg decider in a tie that sends one club to the Champions League final. PSG arrive as last season’s winners — they beat Inter Milan 5-0 in Munich last May, the widest margin in a European Cup final since the competition began in 1955 — and can become only the second team to retain the European Cup since the Champions League era began in 1992. PSG reached this semifinal after eliminating Liverpool in the quarterfinals.
Bayern host the return at Allianz Arena with the familiar stakes of a European knockout night: a single result that ends a season-long pursuit or extends it to a final. For U.S. viewers the schedule is simple — 3 p.m. ET kickoff, coverage across the listed broadcasters and streaming partners, and live text from AS USA starting roughly 90 minutes beforehand for minute-by-minute updates.
Off the pitch, PSG’s longer-term picture is an open question tied to the coach who delivered the club’s first continental title. Luis Enrique, who took over as head coach in 2023, is under contract through June 2027 and is reported to be paid €12 million gross now; French reports say PSG are prepared to offer him about €20 million pre-tax annually if he signs a renewal. Club president Nasser Al‑Khelaifi has publicly framed Enrique as part of a longer project, saying in recent comments: "We are building a long-term project with him […]," and adding, "We have the best coach in the world."
The salary figures and the contract timeline are notable background while PSG chase a second straight final. Whether the club moves to finalize a new deal — and when that would be announced — remains unresolved, and any decision is likely to be judged against immediate sporting outcomes. A run to the final would strengthen the case for an expedited renewal; an exit in Munich would leave the conversation to the summer.
Kickoff at 3 p.m. ET is the immediate next event for fans and for both clubs. The broader unresolved point is clear: PSG must complete the night’s business in Munich before the club and Luis Enrique settle whether the coach’s reported jump from €12 million to roughly €20 million a year becomes an actual contract — and, if so, on what timetable that improved deal will be finalized.






