Stream2Watch — Legal Sports Guide

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Boxing: Where to Watch Legally in the USA

Boxing: Where to Watch Legally in the USA

Boxing's US picture is more fragmented than any other combat sport because it's promoter-driven. Here's who carries what.

Unlike MMA, where the promotion controls broadcast rights, boxing is promoter-driven: each major US boxing promoter has its own broadcast partner. To follow boxing comprehensively in the US, a fan tracks promoters more than broadcasters. Here is the current US map.

Matchroom Boxing → DAZN

Eddie Hearn’s Matchroom is on DAZN in the US ($24.99/mo or $224.99/yr). DAZN carries every Matchroom card live as part of the standard subscription — no additional PPV charge for any Matchroom event including world-title fights. This is a major value point. Matchroom’s roster includes Anthony Joshua, Conor Benn, and others.

DAZN’s standalone US monthly plan is the most expensive single sports subscription on the US market at $24.99, but the boxing slate is uncommonly deep — Matchroom typically promotes 30+ cards per year, all included.

Top Rank → ESPN+

Bob Arum’s Top Rank Boxing is on ESPN+ ($11.99/mo). ESPN+ carries every Top Rank card live, with selected fights also airing on the main ESPN linear channel. Top Rank’s roster includes Tyson Fury (now retired in most weight class projections), Teófimo López, Vasyl Lomachenko, and Naoya Inoue’s US-side cards.

ESPN+ is the practical entry point for any Top Rank fight in the US. No additional PPV charge for the standard Top Rank cards.

Premier Boxing Champions → Amazon Prime Video

Al Haymon’s PBC moved to Amazon Prime Video in 2024 under a long-term deal. PBC cards now air on Prime Video, included with the standard Amazon Prime subscription ($14.99/mo or $139/yr). PBC’s roster includes Errol Spence Jr., Terence Crawford (post-Top Rank), Caleb Plant, and David Benavidez. PBC also produces several PPV cards per year, which are sold separately through Prime Video’s PPV system.

Showtime — closed

Showtime exited boxing in late 2023. Old Showtime cards remain in the Paramount+ with SHOWTIME catalog as VOD, but Showtime no longer produces new boxing events. If you see a current advertisement for Showtime Boxing in 2026, it is for archive content only.

Specific PPV events (Crawford, Canelo, etc.)

The biggest boxing events of the year — the Canelo Álvarez cards, Crawford-Spence, and similar — are often sold as standalone PPV via DAZN PPV, Prime Video Channels, or Showtime PPV (where it still exists for legacy contracts). PPV pricing has varied from $59.99 to $89.99 in recent years.

A current Canelo card on DAZN PPV is bought through the DAZN app even if you do not have a DAZN subscription. Similarly, a current Prime Video PPV is bought through Amazon even if you don’t have Prime.

Heavyweight title unification: where to watch

Heavyweight title fights have spread across promoters in recent years. Fury fights traditionally went through Top Rank (ESPN+) and Queensberry (BT Sport in the UK, ESPN+ in the US). Usyk fights have moved between DAZN and Sky Sports’ Prime Video. For any specific heavyweight fight, check the announcement — there is no fixed home.

US lower-tier boxing

  • Golden Boy Promotions — DAZN US (Matchroom sub-deal)
  • Boxxer (Sky Sports’ UK promoter) — DAZN US for international rights
  • Probellum, Probox, and other smaller promoters — various: DAZN, FITE+ ($7.99/mo), and Triller TV
  • YouTube Boxing / Influencer Boxing — DAZN PPV typically

What a complete US boxing subscription looks like

A fan who wants comprehensive US boxing coverage:

  1. DAZN ($24.99/mo) — Matchroom, Golden Boy, and many international cards
  2. ESPN+ ($11.99/mo) — Top Rank
  3. Amazon Prime ($14.99/mo) — Premier Boxing Champions
  4. DAZN PPV / Prime PPV as individual events arise — usually 4-6 major US PPV events per year

Total monthly: ~$52/mo, plus event-specific PPV purchases. Many fans subscribe to one or two depending on their preferred fighters.

Cross-reference: our MMA and UFC guides cover the adjacent combat-sports verticals. UK readers — see our UK boxing guide for Sky Sports and TNT Sports coverage.

See also

For readers arriving via a stream2watch search: see our mystream2watch explainer (what the old user dashboard was and why it’s gone) and Stream2Watch alternatives (full legal broadcaster map across US, UK, and Germany).

Frequently asked questions

Which broadcasters carry US sports legally?
Rights split across ESPN/ABC (NBA, MLB, college football), CBS Paramount+ (NFL AFC, Champions League), NBC Peacock (NFL Sunday Night, Premier League), FOX (NFL NFC, MLB), NFL+ (out-of-market NFL), NBA League Pass, Amazon Prime Video (NFL Thursday Night), Apple TV+ (MLB Friday Night, MLS Season Pass), ESPN+ (UFC, Bundesliga), DAZN (boxing). Every page on this site names the rights-holder for its event.
Is Stream2Watch the same as stream2watch.tv?
No. Stream2Watch — Legal Sports Guide is an independent editorial publication. We are not affiliated with stream2watch.tv, stream2watch.com, or any service using a similar name. We are an editorial guide to legal US broadcasters only.
Do you list free-to-air options?
Yes, where free-to-air carriage exists. NFL on FOX/CBS/NBC over-the-air, Olympic events on NBC, and many MLB local games on free RSN windows. Each event page calls out the free-to-air option alongside the paid subscriptions.