Where to watch World Cup 2026 in Germany
German rights for 2026 are split between the free public broadcasters (ARD and ZDF) and the paid Magenta TV platform from Deutsche Telekom. The public broadcasters show a subset of matches free, while Magenta TV holds rights to the full tournament. The table below summarizes the expected landscape — always confirm final schedules and match assignments with the broadcaster, as the exact 2026 split can still change.
| Broadcaster | Free or Paid | Matches | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| ARD / ARD Mediathek | Free-to-air | Subset (expected ~half; confirm) | Free |
| ZDF / ZDF Mediathek | Free-to-air | Subset (expected ~half; confirm) | Free |
| Magenta TV (Telekom) | Paid (subscription) | Full 104-match slate (expected) | Monthly subscription (~€/mo — confirm) |
| Royal IPTV | Paid (all-access) | Every match in 4K | $14.90 / month |
Free: ARD & ZDF Mediathek
The simplest free option is Germany's two public broadcasters, ARD and ZDF, both of which stream live through their free Mediathek apps and websites. There's no subscription and no paywall — but coverage is limited to the matches assigned to public TV, and the streams are geo-locked to German IP addresses.
- 1
Open the Mediathek
Go to ardmediathek.de or zdfmediathek.de in your browser, or install the ARD Mediathek / ZDFmediathek apps on your smart TV, phone, tablet, or streaming stick.
- 2
No account or payment needed
Both Mediatheken are free to use. You can usually watch live streams without registering — though creating a free account can help with personalization and resuming playback.
- 3
Find the live match
During the tournament, look for the live World Cup stream on the ARD or ZDF live area. Match assignments vary by day, so check which broadcaster carries the game you want before kickoff.
- 4
Watch from within Germany
The free Mediathek streams are geo-locked to German IP addresses. If you're inside Germany you're set; if you're abroad you'll need a different approach (see the section below).
Full coverage: Magenta TV
To watch the matches that aren't on ARD or ZDF, the route in Germany is Magenta TV, the streaming-TV platform from Deutsche Telekom. Magenta TV is expected to hold rights to the full 104-match slate, including the exclusive games that the public broadcasters don't carry. It's a paid subscription (billed monthly — confirm the exact price and contract terms with Telekom, as packages and any standalone vs. bundled options change). If your goal is to see every game through an official German broadcaster, Magenta TV is the one that covers the whole tournament.
The all-in-one option: all 104 matches in 4K
If you'd rather not split your viewing between the free Mediatheken and a separate Magenta TV subscription — and you want every match in one place — an all-access stream is the simplest route. You skip the app-juggling and get the full 104-match slate in up to 4K.
| Magenta TV subscription | Royal IPTV | |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly cost | Paid subscription (~€/mo — confirm) | $14.90 / month |
| Matches covered | Full slate expected (paid) | Every match, one place |
| Resolution | Up to HD/4K (varies by feed) | Up to 4K |
| Free matches included | Separate from ARD/ZDF free feeds | All matches in one stream |
| Best value | — | 12 months $69.90 = $5.83/mo |
Get set up in minutes with Royal IPTV's 1-month plan ($14.90), or grab the best-value 12-month plan for $69.90 ($5.83/mo). Want to check the 4K experience first? Read how to stream World Cup 2026 in 4K.
Kickoff times in Germany (CEST)
Germany runs on Central European Summer Time (CEST = UTC+2) during the tournament. Because the 2026 matches are played across the USA, Mexico, and Canada, kickoffs land in the German evening through late night — the time difference means many US afternoon games start when it's already evening in Germany. Use these as a planning guide and confirm exact kickoff times with the broadcaster once the fixture list is final.
- CEST = UTC+2 — the German clock during the June–July tournament window.
- A match kicking off at 12:00 noon US Eastern is around 18:00 CEST — German prime-time.
- Later US kickoffs (evening Eastern or West Coast slots) land late at night into the early hours in Germany — plan for night owl viewing.
- Matches at venues in different US/Mexican/Canadian time zones shift accordingly — always check the local CEST time per fixture.
Watching German coverage from abroad
Traveling or living outside Germany during the tournament? The free ARD and ZDF Mediathek streams are geo-locked to German IP addresses, and Magenta TV is similarly restricted, so you'll need a different approach to follow the German feeds from abroad. See our guide to watching World Cup 2026 from abroad for expat-friendly options that work internationally.

