How to watch the Fox One World Cup: every match without cable

FOX One World Cup streaming guide: every one of the 104 matches airs on FOX and FS1; here’s how to watch without cable, plus key prices and free options.

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Stephanie Grant
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Sports reporter covering women's athletics, college sports, and the Olympics. Advocate for equal coverage in sports journalism.
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How to watch the Fox One World Cup: every match without cable

Fans can stream every match without a traditional cable package: all 104 games will air on FOX and FS1 during the tournament running June 11 through July 19, and English-language streams will be available through and several live‑TV services.

That matters because the tournament spans 104 matches across more than five weeks — every group game, knockout round and the final — and viewers who do not subscribe to cable have multiple paid and free ways to watch. FOX One, , Fubo, DISH and Sling TV all carry FOX and FS1 feeds that will carry the matches; will stream selected free coverage, including the opening ceremonies plus two live games.

FOX One is the central paid streaming option for English coverage. The service costs $20 per month, offers a three‑day free trial, and includes multiview functionality so users can watch up to four live games at once and DVR capability. For new subscribers there is a limited‑time deal: three months for $40. Through July 1, customers who buy a Roku Streaming Stick also receive one month of FOX One free. The FOX Sports app will also stream English broadcasts.

Other streaming options and entry prices vary. Hulu + Live TV carries FOX and FS1 and costs $90 per month; the package also includes Hulu’s on‑demand library, Disney+ and. Fubo carries FOX and FS1 as well: its Latino plan is $9.99 for the first month and $19.99 per month after that, while English plans start at $45.99 per month after a five‑day free trial. Sling’s offerings include Sling Select beginning at $20 per month and Sling Blue at $46 per month. DISH’s America’s Top 120 package — which includes FOX among more than 190 channels — runs $90 per month.

Tubi will offer free coverage of the opening ceremonies and two live matches: Mexico vs South Africa on June 11 and USA vs Paraguay on June 12. Fans with a digital antenna may also be able to pick up matches free over the air on FOX and Telemundo, depending on local availability.

Context for U.S. viewers: broadcasters are treating the Club World Cup the way they will the 2026 Men’s World Cup, with widespread distribution across broadcast and streaming. The 2026 tournament will also feature 48 teams and 104 matches; FOX Sports holds English‑language rights for the 2026 event, while Spanish coverage will appear on Telemundo and Universo. The Club World Cup’s national‑broadcast-plus‑streaming rollout gives fans a preview of that multi‑platform approach.

The most immediate complication for cord‑cutters is access through apps. FOX One and the FOX Sports app will stream English coverage, but some viewers may still need a TV provider login to reach streams in the FOX Sports app — a detail that matters if subscribers expect a $20 FOX One plan to be a complete cable replacement. The precise split between what’s available directly inside a FOX One subscription and what requires a separate provider login is not specified in program materials.

The Club World Cup opens June 11; the first free Tubi match is that day and the next day’s USA vs Paraguay is also free on Tubi. The other practical deadline to note is July 1, when the Roku‑stick promotion that includes a free month of FOX One ends. The single most consequential unanswered question for viewers heading into kickoff is straightforward: will paying for FOX One alone — at $20 a month or under the promotional offers — let every fan watch the matches they want without a separate TV provider login? Broadcasters have laid out multiple paths to watch; whether a direct FOX One subscription removes all remaining barriers remains to be clarified before play begins.

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Sports reporter covering women's athletics, college sports, and the Olympics. Advocate for equal coverage in sports journalism.