Fubo (FuboTV) Review 2026: Plans, Pricing, Channels, Sports Coverage & Is It Worth It?

Fubo (FuboTV) Review 2026: Plans, Pricing, Channel Lineup, Sports Coverage and Everything You Need to Know Before Subscribing

If you've been looking for a way to cut the cable cord without losing access to live sports, you've almost certainly come across Fubo — formerly known as FuboTV. Born in 2015 as a niche soccer ("futbol") streaming platform, Fubo has evolved into one of the most comprehensive live TV streaming services available in the United States today, offering hundreds of live channels, unlimited cloud DVR, multiple simultaneous streams, and an unmatched roster of sports networks that makes it the go-to choice for diehard sports fans who want everything in one subscription. In a crowded marketplace filled with streaming alternatives, Fubo has carved out a very specific and defensible niche: it is unapologetically the best live TV streaming option for people who watch sports, and it is not shy about saying so.

But Fubo in 2026 is also a service in transition. The platform has faced significant headwinds from a series of contentious contract disputes with major media conglomerates that have resulted in the removal of entire channel portfolios from its lineup. The loss of all NBCUniversal channels in November 2025 — including NBC, USA Network, Bravo, MSNBC, and several regional sports networks — came on the heels of the April 2024 removal of all Warner Bros. Discovery channels (TBS, TNT, CNN, HBO, and more), leaving meaningful gaps in Fubo's entertainment and news coverage. At the same time, Fubo raised its prices in January 2026, with the Pro plan climbing to $84.99/month at standard rate. These changes have forced many potential subscribers to ask a harder question: is Fubo still worth it in 2026?

The answer, as with most things in the streaming landscape, depends entirely on what you're looking for. For sports-first households — families and individuals who organize their entertainment schedule around NFL games, NBA playoffs, Premier League matches, college football, or the World Baseball Classic — Fubo remains the single most compelling live TV streaming option available. Its sports channel depth, its regional sports network (RSN) coverage, its 4K streaming capabilities, its unlimited cloud DVR and its impressive device compatibility are hard to match in a single subscription. For households that watch primarily entertainment content — drama series, reality TV, news — the missing channels make Fubo a harder sell compared to YouTube TV or Hulu + Live TV.

This comprehensive, fully updated review covers everything you need to make an informed decision: the current plans and pricing in 2026, the full channel lineup and what's missing, the sports coverage that sets Fubo apart, the key features and technology, the devices it supports, how it compares with its main competitors, and an honest, balanced assessment of who should subscribe — and who should look elsewhere.

I — What Is Fubo? From Soccer Niche to Sports-First Streaming Giant

Understanding what Fubo is — and where it came from — helps explain why its current strengths and weaknesses look the way they do.

The origin story: a soccer streaming app that grew up

Fubo launched in 2015 as a dedicated soccer streaming service — the name itself is a nod to "futbol," signaling its original audience. In those early days, it was a skinny bundle focused on international soccer leagues at a fraction of the cost of cable. The platform attracted subscribers who wanted to watch La Liga, the Bundesliga, Serie A and international tournaments without paying for an entire cable package. As the cord-cutting movement accelerated through the late 2010s, Fubo made a strategic decision to expand beyond soccer and become a full cable-replacement service, adding hundreds of channels across sports, entertainment, news and lifestyle programming. By 2020, FuboTV had gone public on the New York Stock Exchange and rebranded itself as a mainstream live TV streaming service with a sports-first identity. The "FuboTV" name was officially shortened to just "Fubo" as part of the brand evolution, reflecting the platform's ambition to be more than just a TV service — it has also expanded into sports betting and interactive second-screen experiences in select markets.

The sports-first philosophy and what it means for subscribers

Fubo's "sports-first" positioning is not just marketing language — it has concrete implications for how the service is built, priced and marketed. The platform invests disproportionately in securing rights to sports channels, including regional sports networks that most other streaming services either don't carry or require as expensive add-ons. FuboTV excels in sports programming: the Pro plan includes ESPN, ESPN2, FOX Sports 1, FOX Sports 2, CBS Sports Network, NFL Network, Golf Channel, and Big Ten Network. Elite adds ESPNews, ESPNU, MLB Network, NBA TV, NHL Network, SEC Network, and ACC Network. International sports fans get beIN Sports (all 8 channels), GolTV, and Willow Sports for cricket coverage, showing Premier League, La Liga, Bundesliga, Serie A, and South American soccer leagues. This depth of sports coverage is Fubo's primary competitive advantage and the main reason sports-focused households choose it over alternatives.

II — Fubo Plans and Pricing 2026: A Complete Breakdown

Fubo offers multiple plans designed for different types of subscribers. Here is everything you need to know about the current pricing structure as of March 2026.

The four main Fubo plans in 2026

Fubo has restructured its plans in 2026 to offer clearer tiers for different audience segments. The four primary English-language plans are as follows.

Sports + News ($55.99/month) is Fubo's entry-level plan for cord-cutters who want live sports and news without entertainment filler. This plan only has 28 channels but includes all the ESPN channels, FS1/FS2, ACC/SEC Networks, NFL Network and all your local channels. It is ideal for households that primarily watch national sports and don't need a wide entertainment channel selection. It's a meaningful addition to Fubo's lineup that addresses the needs of a budget-conscious sports fan who already uses Netflix or another service for entertainment content.

Pro ($73.99–$84.99/month) is Fubo's most popular plan and the standard entry point for the full live TV streaming experience. At approximately $49/mo for 206 channels, it includes all your locals and plenty of favorites. Sports-wise, you get ESPN, ESPN2, FS1, FS2, Big Ten Network, beIN x8, Fubo Sports x9 and much more. The Pro plan is the sweet spot for most households: extensive sports coverage, major broadcast networks, solid entertainment options, unlimited cloud DVR and 10 simultaneous home streams. FuboTV raised prices in January 2026 — the Pro plan increased from $79.99 to $84.99 at standard rate, though promotional pricing bringing it to approximately $73.99 is frequently available for new subscribers.

Elite ($83.99–$94.99/month) adds approximately 50 channels over the Pro plan, bringing the total to 260+. Key additions include 4K streaming capability, NBA TV, NHL Network, MLB Network, and more specialty channels. Elite went from $89.99 to $94.99 in January 2026 at standard rate. For the $10-per-month difference over Pro, Elite is a solid upgrade for households with multiple sports fans or larger families who want access to more content simultaneously.

Deluxe ($103.99/month) is the all-inclusive top tier. The Deluxe plan, which starts at $103.99 per month, offers everything in the Pro and Elite plans plus the Sports Plus package, International Sports Plus package, access to MGM+ and some additional channels. This plan is designed for the absolute sports enthusiast who wants every available channel, NFL RedZone, 4K streaming, and premium movie content bundled together without managing multiple add-ons. At nearly $104 per month, it is the most expensive option, but it represents genuine value for households that would otherwise piece together all of those add-ons individually.

Latino ($14.99/month) is Fubo's Spanish-language plan, designed for Spanish-speaking households seeking affordable access to Spanish-language entertainment, news, and sports. The Latino plan has 50+ Spanish-language networks, unlimited DVR, and two streams for just $14.99 per month. A Latino Plus add-on ($19.99 monthly) provides live sports coverage and even more shows and movies. The Latino plan is one of the most affordable live TV streaming options available for Spanish-speaking audiences and represents excellent value in its category.

First-month discounts and free trial

Fubo consistently offers two types of initial incentives for new subscribers. First, in addition to its 5-day free trial, Fubo offers two current deals: save $20.00 on your first month of the Pro or Elite package, and save $5.00 on your first month of the Latino package. These promotional prices make the first month significantly more affordable and give new subscribers a genuine opportunity to evaluate the service before committing to the full price. The 5-day free trial is available across all English-language plans and allows subscribers to test the full channel lineup, DVR functionality and streaming quality before being charged.

Add-ons: customize your Fubo subscription

One of Fubo's strengths is the flexibility to customize your subscription with targeted add-ons. The most notable options include: Sports Plus with NFL RedZone ($10.99/month) — adds 26 sports channels including NFL RedZone, which shows every touchdown from every NFL game on Sunday afternoons. This is a must-have add-on for serious NFL fans. International Sports Plus — focused on international soccer and cricket for fans following leagues outside the US. Premium channels: Paramount+ with SHOWTIME ($10.99/month), STARZ ($10.99/month), and MGM+ ($6.99/month) — or bundle all three for $19.99/month. Fubo also has 12 more add-on services and channel packs starting at $2.99 monthly, plus six sports add-ons including NBA League Pass ($16.99/month) and MLB.TV ($29.99/month). The add-on ecosystem gives Fubo subscribers the ability to build a truly personalized streaming bundle, which is one of the platform's genuine differentiators from cable's one-size-fits-all approach.

III — Fubo Channel Lineup 2026: What You Get (and What You Don't)

The channel lineup is arguably the most critical factor in evaluating any live TV streaming service, and Fubo's 2026 lineup tells a story of both impressive depth in sports and meaningful gaps in entertainment and news.

Sports channels: the undisputed crown jewel

Fubo's sports channel lineup in 2026 remains best-in-class among streaming services. The comprehensive sports coverage includes: NFL and college football — ESPN, ESPN2, FS1, FS2, NFL Network, Big Ten Network, SEC Network (Elite+), ACC Network (Elite+), and ESPNews. NBA and college basketball — NBA TV (Elite+), ESPN, ESPN2, and local/regional broadcasts via RSNs. MLB — MLB Network (Elite+), ESPN, FS1, and regional broadcasts. NHL — NHL Network (Elite+) and regional broadcasts. International soccer — beIN Sports (all 8 channels on Pro+), GolTV, and Fubo Sports channels showing Premier League, La Liga, Bundesliga, Serie A, and South American competitions. Cricket — Willow Sports for cricket coverage, a rare offering among US streaming services. Golf — Golf Channel (note: Golf Channel is part of NBCUniversal, which has been removed; verify current availability). Regional Sports Networks (RSNs) — Fubo carries 20+ RSNs depending on your location, enabling local team broadcasts for NBA, NHL and MLB that most other streaming services don't offer.

Entertainment and news channels

Fubo's entertainment lineup covers the major broadcast networks — ABC, CBS, FOX — as well as cable staples like FX, FXX, Paramount Network, Comedy Central, MTV, VH1, Syfy, and Discovery. However, the entertainment lineup has been significantly weakened by the departure of several major channel groups.

What FuboTV is missing in 2026: the significant gaps

This is the most important section for potential subscribers to understand carefully before signing up. As of March 2026, major networks including NBC, USA Network, Bravo, and CNBC remain unavailable on the platform following a long-standing contract dispute with NBCUniversal. The NBCUniversal removal, which occurred in November 2025, eliminated a substantial portion of Fubo's channel lineup. In addition to NBC itself (and the local news and primetime programming it carries), the loss includes USA Network, Bravo, CNBC, MSNBC, Golf Channel, Telemundo, E!, Syfy, and several regional NBC Sports networks. Fubo doesn't have full licensing deals in place with AMC Networks, A&E Networks or Warner Bros. Discovery Networks. As a result, the following channels are not available on Fubo — Warner Bros Networks: Boomerang, Cartoon Network, CNN, CNN International, HBO, HLN, TBS, TNT, Turner Classic Movies. The absence of TBS and TNT is particularly impactful for sports fans: these two channels carry significant portions of the March Madness college basketball tournament (the full bracket), NBA playoffs, and Major League Baseball. Anyone planning to watch the complete NCAA Tournament on Fubo in 2026 will find themselves unable to do so. The Warner Bros. Discovery removal occurred in April 2024 and remains unresolved. To partially offset the NBCUniversal loss in terms of pricing, Fubo has maintained its reduced pricing for Pro and Elite plans, which now start at approximately $73.99 per month.

IV — Key Features: What Makes Fubo Stand Out Technically

Beyond channels and price, the features of a live TV streaming service determine the day-to-day quality of the experience. Fubo performs very strongly in several key technical areas.

Unlimited Cloud DVR: record everything, keep it for months

Fubo's cloud DVR is one of the best in the live TV streaming business. Record all the movies, shows, and live sports your heart desires with Fubo's no-limit DVR. And you can keep all your recordings for nine months. There is no storage cap — you can record as many programs as you want simultaneously without worrying about running out of space. The 9-month retention period is one of the most generous in the industry, giving subscribers nearly a full year to watch their recordings. For sports fans, this means you can record every game of an entire NFL season, an entire NBA regular season, or a full soccer league campaign and watch at your convenience. The DVR is also smart — it automatically skips commercials in many recorded programs, though this feature varies by content.

Multiple simultaneous streams: designed for households

Included with Pro and Elite, Family Share + Unlimited Screens (regularly $5.99 per month) lets up to three people watch Fubo simultaneously even if they're outside the home. More specifically, the Pro and Elite plans include 10 simultaneous streams within the home network, plus additional streams for mobile use outside the home. This is one of the highest simultaneous stream counts in the live TV streaming industry, making Fubo particularly well-suited for large households where multiple family members want to watch different channels at the same time. YouTube TV, by comparison, offers unlimited streams within the home and 3 outside — a comparable but slightly different structure.

4K streaming: the next level for live sports

Fubo supports 4K Ultra HD streaming on select content, primarily live sports events. The 4K capability is available starting from the Elite plan (and included in the Deluxe plan). Not all content is available in 4K, but Fubo has been expanding its 4K sports coverage consistently, making it an important differentiator for subscribers with 4K-capable TVs who want to watch live sports in the highest available resolution. For premium sports events — Super Bowl, World Cup matches, major golf tournaments — the 4K option delivers a noticeably superior viewing experience.

User interface and multiview features

Fubo's interface has improved significantly since the early days of the service. The guide-based layout will be familiar to anyone who has used traditional cable TV, making the transition from cable to Fubo relatively intuitive. One distinctive feature that sports fans particularly appreciate is Fubo's multiview capability, which allows subscribers to watch multiple live channels simultaneously on the same screen — particularly useful for watching two games at once or keeping an eye on a sports ticker while watching another channel. The interface also includes personalization features, sports-specific program guides, and easy access to DVR recordings.

V — Device Compatibility: Watch Fubo Almost Anywhere

Fubo works on a wide range of devices, which is essential for households with multiple TVs, phones and tablets.

Supported devices in 2026

Fubo is compatible with virtually every major streaming device and platform available: Smart TVs — Samsung (Tizen OS), LG (webOS), Sony, Vizio, and others. Streaming devices — Amazon Fire TV (all generations), Roku (all models), Apple TV (4th generation and later), Chromecast and Google TV. Gaming consoles — not universally supported; check compatibility for your specific console. Mobile devices — iOS (iPhone and iPad) and Android smartphones and tablets. Web browsers — any modern browser at fubo.tv on Mac or Windows computers. This broad device compatibility means you can start watching on your living room TV and seamlessly continue on your phone during a commute — all within the same subscription and without paying for additional equipment or hardware fees.

No equipment fees: the cord-cutter advantage

One of the clearest financial advantages of Fubo over traditional cable or satellite is the complete absence of equipment fees. Cable companies like Xfinity and Spectrum charge monthly fees for receivers, DVR boxes and cable cards that can add $10 to $30 per device per month to the bill. Fubo requires no proprietary hardware — you use devices you likely already own (smart TV, streaming stick, phone, tablet) and pay nothing extra for the hardware component. Over a 12-month subscription, this can represent a savings of $120 to $360 compared to a cable package with similar content.

VI — Fubo Sports Coverage 2026: The Comprehensive Sports Fan's Guide

For sports fans evaluating Fubo, the depth and breadth of sports programming is the primary consideration. Here is a detailed look at what Fubo covers across major sports categories.

NFL football: the king of American sports

Fubo's NFL coverage is robust but not quite complete. The platform carries ESPN and ESPN2 for Monday Night Football, ABC for simulcasts of MNF and selected playoff games, FS1 and FS2 for Fox's NFL broadcast package, and NFL Network for league-owned content including Thursday Night Football in some weeks. With the Sports Plus add-on ($10.99/month), subscribers also get NFL RedZone — the channel that shows every scoring play from every Sunday afternoon game simultaneously, widely regarded as the single best NFL viewing product for fans who want to follow multiple games at once. What Fubo doesn't have for NFL: NBC's Sunday Night Football package (removed with NBCUniversal in 2025), and the ability to watch complete NBC-aired games or playoff games. This is a meaningful gap for NFL fans during the primetime schedule and postseason.

College sports: ESPN's massive portfolio

Fubo's college sports coverage is among the strongest available in streaming. The platform carries the full ESPN family (ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNews, ESPNU on Elite+), FOX Sports channels, and major conference networks including the Big Ten Network, SEC Network (Elite+), and ACC Network (Elite+). For college football and college basketball fans who follow their team's conference network closely, Fubo is one of the few streaming services that provides this depth of conference-specific programming. The caveat — again — is the March Madness tournament, where the absence of TBS and TNT means Fubo cannot show the full bracket of games.

International soccer: the original strength

International soccer remains one of Fubo's signature strengths, reflecting its roots as a soccer-first platform. The service carries beIN Sports (all 8 channels), GolTV, and multiple Fubo Sports channels that collectively broadcast the Premier League, La Liga, Bundesliga, Serie A, Ligue 1, and major South American competitions. For international soccer fans in the US, Fubo remains the most comprehensive single-subscription option available, providing access to a wider range of international leagues than any competitor. In March 2026, Fubo's programming is also shaped by the return of the World Baseball Classic, which serves as the centerpiece of the month's sports schedule, running from March 5 through March 17 with 20 national teams competing across global venues in Tokyo, San Juan, Houston, and Miami.

Regional Sports Networks: the cord-cutter's Holy Grail

For many cord-cutters, the inability to access their local team's regional sports network (RSN) is the single biggest obstacle to leaving cable. RSNs broadcast local NBA, NHL, and MLB games — the everyday regular-season games that national networks don't carry. Fubo is one of the very few streaming services that carries RSNs, and it does so in more markets than any competitor. Fubo carries 20+ RSNs depending on your location. Your home address determines which RSN you receive. If you live in the Boston area, you get NESN. Chicago residents get Marquee Sports Network. The system uses your billing zip code to assign your home market. For fans of NBA, NHL, or MLB teams who want to watch every local game without cable, Fubo is often the only viable streaming option.

VII — Fubo vs. Competitors: How Does It Stack Up?

No streaming service review is complete without an honest comparison with the main alternatives. Here is how Fubo measures up against YouTube TV and Hulu + Live TV, the two most direct competitors in the live TV streaming market.

Fubo vs. YouTube TV

YouTube TV costs $82.99 per month for 100+ channels. The service includes all Warner Bros. Discovery networks that FuboTV lost — TBS, TNT, Food Network, and HGTV. YouTube TV also maintained its NBCUniversal contract. FuboTV offers more sports-specific channels. The Pro plan includes beIN Sports and Willow Cricket not available on YouTube TV's base plan. The choice between Fubo and YouTube TV in 2026 essentially comes down to a single question: do you prioritize sports depth or entertainment breadth? YouTube TV's channel lineup is more balanced — it has the Warner Bros. Discovery and NBCUniversal channels that Fubo lacks, making it better for households that watch a lot of entertainment, news (CNN, MSNBC), and general programming. Fubo's sports depth — particularly for international soccer, RSNs, and college sports conference channels — makes it clearly superior for sports-first households. YouTube TV is also slightly cheaper ($82.99 vs. $84.99 standard for Fubo Pro) and has a cleaner, more polished user interface.

Fubo vs. Hulu + Live TV

Hulu + Live TV ($82.99/month) bundles live TV with access to Hulu's extensive on-demand library of TV shows and movies — a significant advantage for entertainment-focused households. Hulu also restored most of its major channel agreements, including NBCUniversal and Disney properties, giving it a more complete channel lineup than Fubo in the entertainment vertical. Where Fubo wins: sports channel depth, RSN availability, and specialized sports channels (beIN Sports, Willow Cricket) that Hulu doesn't carry. For households that value the on-demand library and entertainment channel completeness over sports depth, Hulu + Live TV may be the better choice. For sports-first households, Fubo's additional sports channels and RSN coverage tilt the balance in its favor.

VIII — Is Fubo Worth It in 2026? An Honest Assessment

Having examined every dimension of Fubo's offering in 2026, here is the most direct possible answer to the question most readers have been building toward.

Who should subscribe to Fubo

Fubo is the right choice for: Sports-first households that organize their entertainment calendar around NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL, college football, college basketball, or international soccer. Fans who need RSN access to watch their local team's games (NBA, NHL, MLB regular season) without cable. International soccer fans who want a single subscription covering multiple leagues (Premier League, La Liga, Bundesliga, Serie A). Households with multiple sports viewers who benefit from the high simultaneous stream count (10 at home). NFL RedZone subscribers who want to bundle that add-on with a comprehensive live TV service. Sports fans in markets where Fubo carries the local RSN, making it the only viable cord-cutting option for local team coverage.

Who should look elsewhere

Fubo may not be the right choice for: Households that primarily watch entertainment content — the loss of NBCUniversal (Bravo, USA, Syfy) and Warner Bros. Discovery (TBS, TNT, CNN) channels leaves meaningful gaps in the entertainment and news lineup. March Madness fans who need the full tournament bracket — without TBS and TNT, Fubo cannot provide complete NCAA Tournament coverage. Budget-conscious cord-cutters for whom $73-$104/month is too steep — Sling TV and Philo offer live TV streaming at lower price points, though with fewer sports channels and no RSNs. News-focused households — without CNN, MSNBC, CNBC and NBC News, Fubo's news coverage is significantly limited compared to YouTube TV or Hulu + Live TV.

FAQ — Most Asked Questions About Fubo (FuboTV) in 2026

Q1: How much does Fubo cost in 2026?

Fubo offers four main English-language plans: Sports + News ($55.99/mo), Pro ($73.99–$84.99/mo), Elite ($83.99–$94.99/mo), and Deluxe ($103.99/mo). The Latino plan starts at $14.99/mo. FuboTV raised prices in January 2026 — the Pro plan increased from $79.99 to $84.99. New subscriber promotional pricing is typically $10-$25 less than standard rates for the first month.

Q2: Does Fubo have a free trial?

Yes. Fubo offers a 5-day free trial for new subscribers on all English-language plans. After the trial ends, you are charged at the plan's monthly rate. You can cancel any time before the trial ends without being charged. Fubo also regularly offers first-month discounts of up to $20-$30 in addition to the free trial.

Q3: What channels does FuboTV NOT have in 2026?

The most significant missing channels are: NBCUniversal (removed November 2025) — NBC, Bravo, USA Network, MSNBC, CNBC, CNBC, Telemundo, Golf Channel, Syfy, E!, and regional NBC Sports networks. Warner Bros. Discovery (removed April 2024) — TBS, TNT, CNN, HLN, HBO, Turner Classic Movies, Cartoon Network. AMC Networks — A&E, History, Lifetime, AMC, BBC America. A contract dispute removed all NBCUniversal channels in late 2025, including NBC, USA Network, Bravo, and several regional sports networks.

Q4: How many channels does Fubo have in 2026?

Fubo offers 216+ channels on the Pro plan, 260+ on Elite, and 315+ on Deluxe. The Sports + News plan includes 28 targeted sports and news channels. The exact number of channels varies by location, as local channels and regional sports networks depend on your ZIP code. Some users will have access to almost 500 channels in their respective areas, depending on location.

Q5: Can I watch live sports in 4K on Fubo?

Yes. 4K streaming is available on the Elite plan and above. Not all content is broadcast in 4K, but Fubo has been expanding its 4K live sports lineup, including coverage of major events like the Super Bowl, World Cup qualifying matches, and selected college football games. 4K streaming requires a 4K-capable TV or device and a sufficiently fast internet connection (typically 25 Mbps or higher recommended).

Q6: How does Fubo compare to YouTube TV?

Fubo has more sports channels, particularly for international soccer (beIN Sports, Willow Cricket) and conference networks, plus RSN access in more markets. YouTube TV has more entertainment and news channels — it maintained its contracts with NBCUniversal and Warner Bros. Discovery, giving it TBS, TNT, CNN, NBC, and others that Fubo has lost. YouTube TV costs $82.99 per month for 100+ channels and includes all Warner Bros. Discovery networks that FuboTV lost. Sports-first households should lean toward Fubo; balanced entertainment/sports households should consider YouTube TV.

Conclusion: Fubo in 2026 — Still the Best for Sports, With Important Caveats

Fubo enters 2026 as a service that is simultaneously stronger than ever in its core mission — live sports streaming — and more constrained than it has been in recent memory due to high-profile channel losses. The departure of NBCUniversal channels in late 2025, following the earlier loss of Warner Bros. Discovery channels, has left meaningful holes in Fubo's channel lineup that the platform has not yet been able to fill. For a service that once marketed itself as a complete cable replacement, these absences represent a genuine step backward in the completeness of its offering for entertainment-focused households.

And yet, for the audience that Fubo has always served best — sports fans — the platform remains the strongest single streaming subscription available. No other service matches its combination of RSN coverage, international soccer depth, conference sports networks, 4K live sports streaming, unlimited cloud DVR, and high simultaneous stream count. If football, basketball, baseball, hockey, soccer, or college sports are at the center of your entertainment life, Fubo is built for you in a way that no competitor fully replicates. Start with the 5-day free trial, explore the channel lineup in your market, and decide for yourself whether the sports depth justifies the price — for a significant portion of American sports fans, it absolutely does.