DAZN offers all 104 World Cup matches for €19.99 add-on fee

All 104 matches for nineteen euros ninety-nine cents, one time.
DAZN's pricing for exclusive World Cup access, available as an add-on or included in Premium plans.

Una vez cada cuatro años, el mundo se detiene para contemplar el fútbol en su forma más universal, y en 2026 ese momento llega a Norteamérica. DAZN ha consolidado los derechos exclusivos de emisión en streaming de los 104 partidos del Mundial, ofreciendo acceso completo por menos de veinte euros, una cifra que invita a reflexionar sobre cómo el deporte global ha encontrado en las plataformas digitales su nuevo hogar. En un ecosistema mediático habitualmente fragmentado y opaco, la propuesta simplifica una decisión que para millones de aficionados españoles tendrá respuesta entre junio y julio de 2026.

  • DAZN se posiciona como el único destino posible para ver el torneo completo, eliminando la dispersión entre plataformas que ha frustrado a los aficionados en ediciones anteriores.
  • El precio de 19,99 euros como complemento genera una tensión real: es una cifra accesible, pero obliga a los no suscriptores a comprometerse con un ecosistema de pago para acceder a un evento de interés público masivo.
  • La Roja protagoniza tres partidos de grupo —ante Cabo Verde, Arabia Saudí y Uruguay— que concentrarán la atención española, con RTVE como válvula de escape gratuita solo para algunos encuentros.
  • Los suscriptores del plan Premium absorben el Mundial sin coste adicional, lo que convierte la competición en un argumento de retención para quienes ya pagan 31,99 euros al mes por LaLiga, Fórmula 1 y la NBA.
  • La oferta aterriza en un mercado donde la juventud tiene descuento del 30% y donde la flexibilidad de planes busca capturar tanto al aficionado ocasional como al consumidor habitual de deporte.

El Mundial de 2026 se disputará entre el 9 de junio y el 18 de julio en dieciséis ciudades de Estados Unidos, México y Canadá, con Nueva York como sede de la gran final. DAZN ha obtenido los derechos exclusivos de streaming para todos los 104 partidos, convirtiéndose en la única plataforma donde es posible seguir la competición de principio a fin sin saltar entre servicios.

La estructura de precios está diseñada para distintos perfiles. Quienes ya tienen el plan Premium —31,99 euros al mes, que incluye LaLiga, Fórmula 1, Liga Endesa, motociclismo y más de 180 partidos de la NBA— acceden al Mundial sin pagar nada extra. El resto de suscriptores, independientemente de su plan actual, pueden añadir el torneo por 19,99 euros. Los planes individuales oscilan entre los 4,99 euros del paquete Made in USA y los 19,99 del Motor o el Fútbol, con la opción de Baloncesto actualmente rebajada a 6,99 euros.

Para el aficionado español, la selección juega sus tres partidos de grupo en DAZN: el 15 de junio ante Cabo Verde, el 21 ante Arabia Saudí y el 27 frente a Uruguay. RTVE emitirá en abierto algunos encuentros de La Roja, pero el acceso completo al torneo —incluyendo duelos como Inglaterra-Croacia, Brasil-Marruecos o Francia-Noruega— queda reservado a la plataforma.

Técnicamente, todos los planes permiten dos emisiones simultáneas desde una misma ubicación. Las suscripciones mensuales se renuevan automáticamente con treinta días de preaviso para cancelar; las anuales se mantienen durante doce meses. Los menores de treinta años pueden acceder a un descuento del 30%, y todos los planes incluyen Eurosport, Red Bull TV y el contenido original de DAZN. Para quien ya es suscriptor, el Mundial llega como un añadido lógico; para quien no lo es, la pregunta es si mes y medio de competición justifica dar el paso.

The 2026 World Cup is coming to North America, and if you want to watch all 104 matches from your couch, DAZN has made the math surprisingly simple: nineteen euros and ninety-nine cents, one time, gets you everything.

The tournament runs from June 9 through July 18 across the United States, Mexico, and Canada, with matches spread across sixteen host cities. New York will host the final. DAZN holds the exclusive streaming rights to every single match—all 104 of them—making it the only platform where you can follow the entire competition from start to finish. There is no fragmentation, no hunting across services. It's all in one place.

The pricing structure offers flexibility. If you already subscribe to DAZN's Premium plan, which costs thirty-one euros and ninety-nine cents per month, the World Cup is simply included at no extra charge. That plan bundles five LaLiga matches per week across most of the season, the full Formula 1 calendar, Spanish basketball's Liga Endesa, motorcycle racing, and more than 180 NBA regular season games plus playoffs and the championship finals. For those with other DAZN subscriptions—the Motor plan for racing, the Football plan for league soccer, the Basketball plan, or the Made in USA package—adding World Cup access means paying the nineteen-ninety-nine euro fee on top of whatever monthly cost you're already carrying. The Motor and Football plans each run nineteen euros ninety-nine cents monthly, Basketball costs nine euros ninety-nine cents (currently discounted to six euros ninety-nine cents), and Made in USA sits at four euros ninety-nine cents.

Spain's national team will feature prominently in the group stage. La Roja plays Cabo Verde on June 15 at 6 p.m., Saudi Arabia on June 21 at 6 p.m., and Uruguay on June 27 at 2 a.m. Those matches, along with others involving the Spanish squad, will stream exclusively on DAZN. The public broadcaster RTVE will carry some Spanish team games in free-to-air format, but only DAZN offers the complete tournament access. The matchups alone suggest the quality on offer: Spain versus Uruguay, England against Croatia, Brazil facing Morocco, France playing Norway, Germany taking on Ecuador, Portugal meeting Colombia.

The platform's technical terms are straightforward. All plans allow two simultaneous streams from a single location. Monthly subscriptions renew automatically and require thirty days' notice to cancel; annual plans lock in for twelve months before cancellation takes effect. Subscribers can upgrade or switch plans from their account settings, with upgrades taking effect immediately. Pay-per-view events operate under different rules—they're limited to one device from one location regardless of plan tier.

For viewers aged eighteen to thirty, DAZN offers a youth rate with thirty percent off monthly and annual plans paid in installments. Every subscription tier includes Eurosport channels, Red Bull TV, and DAZN's original content: documentaries, interviews, series, and sports programming beyond the core sports packages.

The World Cup add-on represents a straightforward offer in a landscape often cluttered with regional blackouts and fragmented rights. For less than twenty euros, the entire tournament becomes accessible. Whether that represents genuine value depends on whether you're already a DAZN subscriber or willing to become one for the month and a half the competition runs. For those already paying for sports content on the platform, the World Cup arrives as an included bonus.

DAZN is the only platform where you can follow the entire competition from start to finish.
— Service offering
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Inventor

Why did DAZN secure exclusive rights to all 104 matches instead of splitting them across multiple broadcasters like we've seen before?

Model

The consolidation reflects how streaming platforms now compete for sports audiences. Exclusivity is the draw—if you want to follow the entire tournament without channel-hopping, there's only one place to go.

Inventor

The nineteen-ninety-nine euro add-on seems cheap. Is that actually sustainable pricing, or are they banking on people upgrading to Premium?

Model

It's probably both. The add-on captures price-sensitive viewers who only want the World Cup. But Premium at thirty-one euros ninety-nine cents includes so much year-round content that the World Cup becomes almost incidental to the value proposition. They're hedging.

Inventor

What about the people who don't have DAZN and don't want it except for the World Cup?

Model

They pay the add-on fee and get a month's access. But they're also exposed to everything else on the platform during that time. DAZN gets a subscriber for thirty days, even if it's just for one tournament.

Inventor

The simultaneous stream limit is two devices from one location. That seems restrictive for a family watching together.

Model

It's a deliberate constraint. Two screens covers most households, but it forces a choice if three people want to watch simultaneously. It's not punitive, but it's not generous either.

Inventor

Spain's group stage matches are listed with specific times. Does that matter for how people plan to watch?

Model

Enormously. The Uruguay match at 2 a.m. on June 27 tells you something about scheduling—time zones across three countries mean some matches will be inconvenient for European viewers. That's the trade-off of hosting in North America.

Inventor

RTVE gets to broadcast some Spanish matches for free. Does that undercut DAZN's value?

Model

Only partially. RTVE gets select matches, probably the most popular ones. But if you want to watch Spain play a less prominent opponent, or follow any other team's journey, DAZN is your only option. The free broadcast is a safety net, not a substitute.

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