DAZN Sports Streaming: Full Country-by-Country Guide for 2026
DAZN is in 200+ countries but sports rights change by market. Bundesliga in Germany, F1 in Japan, boxing in the US. What you actually get in your country.
DAZN operates in 200+ countries with dramatically different sports rights in each market. Key markets: Germany (Bundesliga, Champions League at €29.99/month), Japan (J-League, F1, NFL at ¥3,700/month), Canada (Champions League, Premier League). Global events like boxing PPV are widely available.
DAZN is a sports streaming service available in 200+ countries, but the content you can actually watch varies enormously depending on where you are. DAZN operates on a market-by-market rights model: it bids for specific sports rights territory by territory, meaning a DAZN subscription in Germany gives you Bundesliga and Champions League, while a DAZN subscription in Japan gives you J-League, F1, and NFL, and a DAZN subscription in the US gives you primarily boxing. As of 2026, DAZN has over 10 million paid subscribers globally and has invested approximately $2 billion in sports rights annually.
DAZN Germany: Bundesliga and European football
Germany is DAZN's most sports-rich market. German subscribers get: Bundesliga (shared with Sky Deutschland — DAZN holds Friday and Sunday evening matches), UEFA Champions League (Tuesday matches and selected knockout stage), UEFA Europa League, Serie A (Italian football), Ligue 1 (French football), La Liga (Spanish football), Formula 1 (split with RTL/Sat.1 for free-to-air), boxing, and combat sports.
DAZN Germany pricing: €29.99/month or €274.99/year. This is one of DAZN's most expensive markets — justified by the comprehensive football rights package. German subscribers get live and on-demand access to over 800 live sports events per month across all rights held.
DAZN Japan: the most comprehensive package
Japan is arguably DAZN's deepest rights market. Japanese subscribers get: J1 League and J2 League (Japanese football — DAZN holds exclusive rights, replacing the old J.League TV deal in 2017), Formula 1 (all races and qualifying), NASCAR, NFL (all regular season and playoff games), MLB, NBA, Cycling (Tour de France, Giro d'Italia), boxing, and combat sports.
DAZN Japan pricing: ¥3,700/month (~$24 USD) or ¥37,000/year. The J1 League deal alone cost DAZN approximately ¥21.3 billion ($142 million USD) for 10 years of exclusive rights starting 2017 — one of the largest sports media deals in Japanese history. Formula 1's popularity in Japan (driven by Honda's F1 involvement and the Japanese GP) makes the F1 rights particularly valuable in this market.
DAZN Canada: European football and more
Canada's DAZN offering focuses on European football. Canadian subscribers get: UEFA Champions League, UEFA Europa League, UEFA Conference League, Premier League (shared rights with TSN/CTV for select matches), La Liga, Serie A, Ligue 1, and combat sports. Canada does not have the same NFL rights as Japan — NFL games in Canada air primarily on TSN and CTV under separate deals.
DAZN Canada pricing: CAD$29.99/month or CAD$199.99/year. Canadian sports fans have historically had access to a strong sports broadcasting ecosystem, but DAZN has successfully carved out European football rights that were previously fragmented across Bell Media and Rogers sports channels.
DAZN US: a boxing-focused offering
DAZN's US service is the outlier among major markets. Unlike Germany, Japan, or Canada, the US offering focuses almost exclusively on boxing and combat sports. DAZN does not hold US rights to the NFL (NBC/Peacock), NBA (ESPN/TNT/Amazon), MLB (ESPN/Fox/Apple TV+), Premier League (Peacock/NBC), or any major US professional league — these rights are held by established US sports broadcasters at costs DAZN has not matched.
DAZN US has invested heavily in boxing: the platform signed Floyd Mayweather, Canelo Alvarez, Anthony Joshua, and other major boxing names to DAZN-exclusive deals. US pricing: $24.99/month or $224.99/year. DAZN Global (available in the US and other markets) is $19.99/month and focuses on the boxing, MMA, and wrestling content available worldwide.
Countries where DAZN is limited or unavailable
DAZN exited Australia in 2020 after failing to secure sufficient sports rights. The Australian market is dominated by Kayo Sports (which holds AFL, NRL, cricket, Formula 1, Supercars), Foxtel, and Optus Sport (Premier League). DAZN has no current plan to re-enter Australia.
The UK market sees DAZN in a limited capacity — DAZN holds rights to some boxing events and selected combat sports, but the major football rights are held by Sky Sports, TNT Sports (BT Sport successor), and Amazon Prime Video. Premier League rights cost approximately £5 billion for the 2025–2028 cycle — beyond DAZN's current UK investment appetite.