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Boxing

Live Boxing TV & Streaming Schedule

Access our ultimate guide containing official television channels and digital live streaming schedules for all upcoming Boxing fixtures in your territory.

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Official Rights Holders

Where to Stream Boxing Live

The following premium networks and streaming platforms hold the verified digital broadcast rights to air official Boxing action.

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About Boxing

Boxing is the oldest combat sport in the world. The structure is a mess — multiple sanctioning bodies, rival promoters, and networks that don't play nice with each other. But when the big fights happen, the world stops. The heavyweight division is hot right now. The lightweights are stacked. And the pay-per-view numbers keep climbing. The next big fight is already selling out arenas.

Top promoters and platforms

Top Rank (Bob Arum) is the old guard. They've been in the game for 50-plus years and still have the biggest names. Matchroom Boxing (Eddie Hearn) runs the UK scene and has a massive deal with DAZN. Premier Boxing Champions (PBC) is the US powerhouse, with deals on Amazon Prime Video and Showtime before that. The promoters hate each other, which makes unifying titles a nightmare. But when they do business, the money is insane.

Top fighters

Oleksandr Usyk is the king of the heavyweights. The Ukrainian holds all the belts and just beat Tyson Fury again last year. Naoya Inoue is the best pound-for-pound fighter on the planet. The Japanese monster just keeps knocking everyone out. Canelo Álvarez is still the face of boxing, even though he's past his prime. He's still selling out stadiums and pulling massive pay-per-view numbers. Terence Crawford, Gervonta Davis, and Artur Beterbiev round out the top tier.

Viewership

The biggest fights pull massive numbers. Usyk-Fury II did over 1.5 million pay-per-view buys in the US and millions more globally. Canelo fights usually hit a million buys. Inoue's fights in Japan draw huge domestic numbers. The sport doesn't have consistent weekly ratings like the UFC, but when the stars align, the audience is massive. The 2025 heavyweight unification fight was watched by over 50 million people worldwide across all platforms.

Pay-per-view model

Boxing lives on pay-per-view. The big fights cost between $70 and $90 in the US. In the UK, it's usually cheaper — around £25 to £30. The platforms change depending on the promoter. DAZN is the main home for Matchroom and some Top Rank cards. Amazon Prime Video has the PBC deal now — you buy the fight through the app. ESPN+ carries Top Rank events, but the big ones are still PPV. There's no single platform. You have to chase the fights.

TV options

Regular TV boxing is almost dead. ESPN still runs Friday Night Fights-type cards on ESPN2. DAZN has some smaller shows on their platform. But the days of free fights on network TV are over. The only way to watch the big names is to pay. The undercards sometimes show up on YouTube or the promoter's social media, but the main event is always behind a paywall.

International viewing

Same deal worldwide. DAZN has a massive global footprint. In the UK, Sky Sports Box Office still does some PPVs. In Australia, Main Event carries the big US fights. In Japan, the local broadcasters have deals with the domestic stars. But for most fans, it's a digital transaction. You buy the fight on the app, you watch it on your phone or TV. No blackouts. No regional restrictions. Just money out of your wallet.

Next big fights

The 2026 boxing calendar is stacked. Usyk is expected to fight again in the fall. Inoue has a mandatory defense coming up in Japan. Canelo is targeting a September return. The heavyweight division is also heating up with the next generation of contenders. The pay-per-view prices keep going up, but the fans keep paying. It's the oldest sport in the book, and it's not going anywhere.