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ESPN November sale
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Best Streaming Services for ESPN

Don't miss a single touchdown, homerun, or slam dunk. Ditch the contract but keep the sports with our guide to the Top Live TV Options for Watching ESPN.

Value For Money
HD & 4k Quality
VOD + DVR
The Most Popular
1
Hulu + Live TV logo
  • Spring Sale! 3-day free trial
  • ESPN, ESPN2, ESPN3 & ESPNU - unlimited access
  • Disney+, ESPN Unlimited & HBO Max Bundle Plan
9.9
Outstanding
9,307 people visited this site today
Start 3-Day Free Trial
9,307 people visited this site today
2
  • 50% off first month
  • ESPN, ESPN2 & ESPN3 on Sling Orange from $22.99
  • No contract, cancel anytime
9.7
Excellent
3
DirecTV logo
  • 40% off + 5-day free trial
  • Full ESPN suite + SEC Network included
  • Unlimited Cloud DVR storage
9.6
Excellent
4
Mountain landscape
  • 7-Day Free Trial
  • Bundle with Peacock - save 30%+ vs separate plans
  • Original shows and films
9.2
Great
5
  • Save 52% on Disney+ Bundle
  • Marvel, Star Wars, Pixar & National Geo on demand
  • Download on up to 10 devices
8.9
Great
Our Top Choice
Hulu + Live TV logo
  • Spring Sale! 3-day free trial
  • ESPN, ESPN2, ESPN3 & ESPNU - unlimited access
  • Disney+, ESPN Unlimited & HBO Max Bundle Plan
9.9
Outstanding

How to pick the right streaming service in 2026

The streaming market has matured past the point where there are only a few options. There are now more services than most people want to evaluate, several overlapping in what they offer. The question isn't "should I stream" - it's "which combination covers what I actually watch without paying for things I don't use."

The most common mistake is subscribing to too many services at once. It's easy to end up spending $180-200/month across four or five subscriptions - which is exactly what cable used to cost. The goal is deliberate. Two or three services that together cover live TV, sports, and on-demand content.

The simplest framework: split what you need into two categories.

Live TV covers sports, local news, network shows as they air, and cable channels. You need at most one live TV service.

On-demand covers movies, original series, and content you watch on your own schedule. You probably need one, maybe two.

The combination that works for most households: one live TV service plus one or two on-demand services. Total cost is typically $100-140/month - below the average cable bill, covering more content than most households have time to watch.

Sling TV - from $45.99/month

The most affordable live TV option. The Orange package covers ESPN, TNT, TBS, and most major cable channels. The Blue package swaps sports-focused channels for a broader entertainment and news lineup. Orange + Blue at $60.99/month gives the most complete Sling channel lineup. DVR is capped at 50 hours.

Best for: budget-conscious viewers who want live TV without paying for a full cable replacement. A good starting point for people who aren't sure how much they'll use a live TV service.

Not ideal for: households that need local channels in all markets, unlimited DVR, or more than one simultaneous stream on the Orange plan.


Hulu + Live TV - $89.99/month

The most complete single package available. 90+ live channels including ESPN, local networks in most markets, Fox, ABC, and cable entertainment channels. Unlimited cloud DVR. The full Hulu on-demand library with 80,000+ titles. Disney+ and ESPN Unlimited bundled in at no extra cost. Two simultaneous streams on the base plan, upgradeable to unlimited.

Best for: households replacing cable who also want a large on-demand library and don't want to manage multiple subscriptions.

Not ideal for: people on tight budgets - it's the most expensive option on this list.
 

DIRECTV - from $59.99/month

The premium option. Starts at $59.99/month and goes up from there. The strongest regional sports network coverage of any streaming service - if you follow local professional sports teams, this is the most reliable option. Unlimited cloud DVR. Unlimited streams on your home network on higher-tier plans.

Best for: sports-heavy households, former cable subscribers who want the most complete channel lineup, and anyone who needs regional sports networks.

Not ideal for: people looking to save significant money over cable - the price difference is smaller than with other services, though you still avoid contracts and equipment fees.

Disney+ - from $7.99/month

On-demand only. No live TV, no cable channels, no sports broadcasts. The content library covers Disney, Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars, and National Geographic. Included free with Hulu + Live TV - redundant to purchase separately if you have that package.

Best for: families with kids, Marvel and Star Wars fans, households that want a family-friendly on-demand supplement to a live TV service.

Not ideal for: anyone looking for live TV, sports, or news.

Apple TV+ - from $9.99/month

On-demand original content only. Apple TV+ doesn't carry licensed content from other studios - everything on it was made by Apple. The library is smaller than Netflix or Hulu, but the production quality is consistently high. Originals include Ted Lasso, Severance, The Morning Show, and Slow Horses. Also holds MLS Season Pass for soccer fans.

Best for: viewers who prioritize quality over quantity in on-demand content, MLS soccer fans, and households that want a premium complement to a live TV service.

Not ideal for: anyone expecting a large back-catalogue of movies or licensed TV shows.

Hulu - from $7.99/month

On-demand only at this price point. Next-day access to shows from ABC, NBC, and Fox. A large library of licensed movies and series. The ad-supported plan at $7.99/month is competitive with Netflix and gives you more current network TV than any other service at that price.

Best for: people who watch a lot of network TV and want to catch up on shows the day after they air. A solid Netflix alternative at lower cost.

Not ideal for: live TV, sports, or local news - you need to step up to Hulu + Live TV for those.
 


Which combination makes sense for your household

If you're replacing cable entirely: Hulu + Live TV is the cleanest single-service solution. It covers live channels, local networks, sports, on-demand, and comes with Disney+ included. One bill, one login, nothing missing for most households.

If you're on a budget: Sling TV Orange at $45.99/month plus Disney+ at $7.99/month gives you live TV and a strong on-demand library for under $55/month combined. The tradeoffs are capped DVR and limited local channels.

If sports are the priority: DIRECTV at $84.99/month covers the most ground for sports fans - particularly anyone who follows a local team and needs regional sports networks. Add Apple TV+ for MLS if you're a soccer fan.

If you mainly want on-demand: Disney+ and Apple TV+ together run roughly $18/month and cover a wide range of original and library content. Add Hulu at $7.99/month for network TV. This combination gives you strong on-demand depth at around $26/month - a fraction of a cable bill.

Free trials - how to use them properly

Every service on this list except Sling TV offers a free trial. Apple TV+ gives you 7 days. DIRECTV gives you 5. Hulu gives you 3.

The most common mistake with free trials is signing up and forgetting to actually use the service. Sign up during a week when you have something specific to watch - a game, a season premiere, a tournament - and use the trial to verify that the service works reliably on your TV and covers what you expected. Cancel before the trial ends if it doesn't. All cancellations are instant and there are no fees.

Free Trial Comparison

Not every service offers a free trial, and the ones that do vary in length. Apple TV+ gives you 7 days, DirecTV Stream offers 5 days, and Hulu + Live TV gives you 3 days. Sling TV doesn't offer a free trial at all. All trials cancel automatically if you don't continue - no need to call anyone.


ESPN vs. ESPN+ vs. ESPN Unlimited - What's the Difference?

Three names, three different things. Here's how to tell them apart.

ESPN is the live cable channel - the one that airs Monday Night Football, the NBA Finals, and College GameDay in real time. You get it through a live TV streaming service like Hulu + Live TV, Sling TV, or DirecTV Stream. It's not a standalone app you subscribe to directly.

ESPN+ is Disney's standalone streaming service. It carries select live sports - UFC fights, some MLB and NHL games, La Liga soccer, and college sports - plus original shows and a deep library of on-demand content. It doesn't include the main ESPN channel. A subscription runs $11.99/month or $119.99/year.

ESPN Unlimited is Disney's upgraded tier, replacing ESPN+ and adding more live sports coverage including more NFL, NBA, and college games. It's available as a standalone plan or bundled with Hulu + Live TV and Disney+ at no extra cost.

If you want live ESPN for mainstream sports, you need a live TV service. If you want a standalone add-on for additional sports content, ESPN+ or ESPN Unlimited is what you're after.


ESPN Unlimited - What You Get and What It Costs

ESPN Unlimited is Disney's premium sports streaming tier, designed to replace ESPN+ with broader live sports coverage. It includes more live NFL, NBA, NHL, and MLB games than ESPN+ offered, plus college football and basketball, UFC Fight Nights, international soccer leagues, and the full ESPN+ on-demand library.

On pricing, standalone runs $15.99/month. Bundled with Disney+ it's $24.99/month. And if you're already on Hulu + Live TV, ESPN Unlimited is included at no extra cost - meaning you get the main ESPN channel live plus the full streaming library under one subscription.

There's no standalone free trial for ESPN Unlimited. The best way to test it is through the Hulu + Live TV 3-day free trial or the DirecTV Stream 5-day trial, both of which include access to ESPN content.


ESPN Day Pass - Single-Game Access Without a Subscription

If you only want to watch one game and don't want to commit to a monthly plan, ESPN+ and ESPN Unlimited offer Day Passes for select live events. These are available for specific pay-per-view bouts - typically UFC cards and combat sports - rather than regular-season games. Pricing varies by event, usually between $9.99 and $79.99 depending on the card.

For everyday sports like NBA, NFL, or college football, a Day Pass isn't an option - those are tied to monthly subscriptions or live TV packages. If you just want to catch a one-off game, the cheapest path is a free trial on Hulu + Live TV or DirecTV Stream, which gives you 3-5 days of full access at no cost.


ESPN2 - Which Services Carry It?

ESPN2 airs a mix of live sports, sports news, and alternate broadcasts - including the Monday Night Football alternate feed, college sports, tennis, and more. Not every streaming service includes it, so it's worth checking before you sign up.

Hulu + Live TV has the most complete ESPN suite: ESPN, ESPN2, ESPN3, and ESPNU all in one plan. DirecTV Stream and Sling Orange both carry ESPN2 as well. Sling Blue, Disney+, and Apple TV+ don't include ESPN2 - so if it's a priority, those plans won't cover you.