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Watch the 2026 World Cup in Italy.

By Mikey · Updated 28 May 2026 · 4 min read

Quick answer: in Italy the World Cup is mostly behind a paywall. RAI broadcasts 35 matches free to air, including the opening match, semi-finals and the final. DAZN streams all 104 on paid subscription. Free workaround: install a VPN, connect to a free-to-air country (UK for BBC iPlayer, Brazil for CazéTV), and watch every match for nothing.

The full broadcaster picture in Italy

Italy has solid free coverage: 35 matches on RAI, crucially including both semi-finals and the final. For the other ~70 matches a DAZN subscription or a VPN to BBC iPlayer.

On TV

RAI broadcasts 35 matches free to air, including the opening match, semi-finals and the final. DAZN streams all 104 on paid subscription.

Streaming

RaiPlay (free, 35 matches), DAZN (paid, all 104).

RaiPlay (paid)
Official paid broadcaster. Opens in a new tab.
Go to RaiPlay →

The free workaround: VPN to a free-to-air country

The cleanest way to watch every match free in Italy is to install a VPN and connect to a country that has full free-to-air coverage. Three solid options:

VPN setup takes about five minutes. The legal note: VPNs are legal in nearly every country, this is the standard expat-and-traveller use case, broadcasters tolerate it.

My pick: NordVPN
Servers in 100+ countries (UK, Brazil, Australia and more), fast enough for live HD, 30-day money-back guarantee. Full VPN guide →
Get NordVPN →

Tournament dates to remember

The 2026 FIFA World Cup runs 11 June to 19 July, 2026 across the USA, Canada and Mexico. 48 teams, 104 matches, 16 host cities.

European prime-time matches air in Italian evening.

FAQ for Italy viewers

Is RaiPlay actually free?

Not in Italy. The local options are paid. The free path is a VPN to a country with full free-to-air coverage (UK, Brazil, Australia, etc.).

Can I watch every single match?

Not free in Italy directly. With a VPN to the UK (BBC iPlayer) or Brazil (CazéTV) you can watch all 104 matches free.

Is it legal to use a VPN here?

VPNs are legal in nearly every country in the world. A small number restrict them (China, Russia, Iran, North Korea, UAE in some contexts). Check your local rules. Using a VPN to access a free home broadcast while travelling is the standard expat and traveller use case.

What if my country’s broadcaster changes mid-tournament?

Email mgmikeymg@gmail.com if you spot a broadcaster update. The site gets corrected the same day.