Right, let's be honest — the World Cup 2026 is shaping up to be a beast. With 48 teams, three host nations and a whopping 104 matches across the USA, Canada and Mexico, it's the biggest tournament we've ever seen. The problem? Half the games will kick off at awkward hours for us in the UK, and traditional broadcasters tend to cherry-pick the headline fixtures while burying the group stage minnows on red button or skipping them entirely.
I went down the rabbit hole last month trying to figure out the cheapest way to catch every single match in proper HD, and the maths on a full Sky package made my eyes water. Between the standard telly licence, a sports add-on and the broadband bundle, you're easily looking at sixty quid a month before you've even sat down on the sofa. That's fine if you watch loads of Premier League, but just for a one-month tournament window it feels like daylight robbery.
What I've landed on instead is a streaming setup that runs around £10 a month and works on the Firestick, my old smart telly and even the phone when I'm stuck on the train. The picture quality has genuinely surprised me — crisp HD, no dodgy buffering during the Euros warm-up friendlies, and you get the BBC and ITV feeds alongside the international broadcasters, which is brilliant for catching Guy Mowbray's commentary versus the American pundits getting overexcited about "soccer". For a full breakdown on this, there is a solid guide at https://digitalplanetiptv.site/world-cup-2026-matches/.
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