The NFL does not make it easy to watch games from outside the United States. Between geo-blocked apps, international broadcast rights fragmented across a dozen countries, and pricing that changes every season, most expats and travelers end up missing Sunday afternoon kickoffs entirely.
We have tested every major option available in 2026. Some are expensive. Some have blackout windows that wipe out the best games. And one is significantly cheaper than the rest — which we cover at the end.
If you are an American abroad, stationed overseas, or an international fan who grew up on the sport, this guide covers exactly what your options are this season and what each one costs.
NFL Game Pass International: The Official Route
NFL Game Pass International is the league’s own streaming product sold to fans outside the US. For the 2025-26 season, pricing runs roughly $100-150 USD per season depending on your country, with a “Pro” tier that includes live games (not just replays) sitting closer to $200 in most markets.
The catch is that live game access is still restricted in many countries where local broadcast deals exist. If you are in the UK, Sky Sports holds rights to certain games. In Germany, DAZN has a package. Game Pass International respects those deals and blocks out covered games accordingly.
You also lose access to RedZone — the best thing about NFL Sundays — outside the premium tier. For most fans, RedZone alone is worth more than any single game.
Sunday Ticket Abroad: Not Available
Sunday Ticket moved to YouTube TV and YouTube Primetime Channels in the US starting 2023. As of 2026, it remains a US-only product. You cannot purchase it with a non-US billing address. VPN workarounds existed briefly but Google’s payment system catches most of them during checkout.
Sunday Ticket standalone pricing in the US is $349 per season, or $189 if you have a qualifying YouTube TV plan. None of that is available to you if you live in Paris, London, Dubai, or anywhere outside America.
Local Broadcast Deals by Country
Depending on where you are, local broadcasters carry some or all NFL games. The coverage is inconsistent — you might get Monday Night Football but nothing on Sunday afternoon.
- UK: Sky Sports NFL carries 100+ live games per season. NFL on Sky costs around £25/month as part of a Sky Sports bundle. Channel 4 carries the Super Bowl free-to-air.
- Germany: DAZN has rights to multiple games. Subscription runs €34.99/month or €274.99/year.
- France: DAZN France and beIN Sports share coverage. BeIN alone is around €15/month.
- Australia: ESPN Australia via Kayo Sports or Foxtel. Kayo starts at AUD $25/month.
- Canada: DAZN Canada at CAD $24.99/month covers most games.
None of these give you every game, every week, in one place. Each broadcaster picks and chooses which matchups to air, and the playoff picture can shift which games they prioritize.
Free Options: What Actually Works
NFL Network and ESPN carry some games that technically stream free with authentication in the US. Abroad, those streams are geo-blocked. YouTube sometimes carries one regular-season game per year on the NFL’s official channel — that is the extent of free legitimate coverage internationally.
Pluto TV, Peacock, and Amazon Prime carry selective games in the US. None of those rights extend consistently to international audiences in 2026.
Cost Comparison: What Each Option Runs You Per Month
| Service | Monthly Cost | Live Games | BlackoutRisk |
|---|---|---|---|
| NFL Game Pass International Pro | ~$16-20/mo (annual) | Yes (partial) | High |
| Sky Sports NFL (UK) | ~£25/mo | Yes | Some |
| DAZN Germany | €34.99/mo | Yes (partial) | Low |
| Kayo Sports (AUS) | AUD $25/mo | Yes | Low |
| MazzTV streaming subscription | From £12.99/mo | Yes | None |
How MazzTV Handles This
MazzTV carries US sports channels — including the networks that broadcast NFL games — as part of its live channels streaming package. You get ESPN, NFL Network, and major regional sports feeds without geo-restrictions or season-long commitments.
The pricing is a flat monthly rate starting at £12.99 — well under what you’d pay for Sky Sports or DAZN, and without the blackout complications that come with official league products. One plan covers NFL, NBA, MLB, college football, and hundreds of other live channels. Check the full channels list to confirm NFL coverage in your region.
Not sure if it works on your device before committing? The 24-hour trial lets you test everything live — including NFL Network — before you pay for a full month. See current plan pricing at MazzTV pricing.