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Watch the 2026 World Cup in Sub-Saharan Africa.

By Mikey · Updated 28 May 2026 · 4 min read

Quick answer: in Sub-Saharan Africa the World Cup is mostly behind a paywall. New World TV and SuperSport cover the region (mixed free/paid models). 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 Sub-Saharan Africa

The region is split: SuperSport on DStv (paid) carries the comprehensive package. Some matches stream free via New World TV. For a fully free option a VPN to the UK or Brazil works.

On TV

New World TV and SuperSport cover the region (mixed free/paid models).

Streaming

SuperSport / DStv.

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

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

The cleanest way to watch every match free in Sub-Saharan Africa 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-evening matches air in Nigerian late evening; US-hosted matches late at night.

FAQ for Sub-Saharan Africa viewers

Is SuperSport actually free?

Not in Sub-Saharan Africa. 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 Sub-Saharan Africa 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.