DAZN Review 2026: Worth It for Boxing, MMA, and Soccer?

Our DAZN review covers boxing depth, pricing, geo-restrictions, streaming quality, DAZN PPV, and how it compares to ESPN+ for fight fans. Verdict inside.

·Updated April 2, 2026·10 min read
Sports fan watching a boxing match on DAZN streaming service on a large TV
Updated April 2, 2026How We Review

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This DAZN review is for boxing fans, fight night regulars, and cord-cutters who want to watch the sport without paying for cable — and who have heard DAZN's name come up every time Canelo Álvarez steps into the ring. I've covered every major sports streaming service for this site, and DAZN is the one I get asked about most by boxing-specific readers. It fills a real gap in the US sports streaming landscape, but it comes with limitations worth understanding before you subscribe.

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The short version: DAZN is the best streaming service for boxing if Matchroom fighters are on your watch list. It's more complicated to assess if you want MMA or soccer, where it competes against better-resourced services. Here's everything you need to know.


DAZN Review: Quick Verdict


What Is DAZN and Who Is It For?

DAZN is a sports-only streaming service that built its reputation as the global home of boxing. It holds exclusive rights to Matchroom Boxing — the promoter responsible for a large percentage of the world's most-watched fights — and has exclusive deals with individual fighters including Canelo Álvarez, the most commercially successful boxer in the world right now.

If those names mean something to you, DAZN is almost certainly in your future. If you're primarily an NFL or NBA fan, DAZN is not your service — it carries none of the major North American team sports leagues.

The audience DAZN serves well: boxing fans first, fight sports fans second, soccer fans third (especially outside the US).

DAZN streaming app open on a smart TV showing upcoming boxing events and fight schedule

DAZN Pricing: What You Pay in 2026

| Plan | Price | |---|---| | Monthly | $19.99/month | | Annual | $99.99/year (~$8.33/month) |

The annual plan is the right choice for anyone who plans to watch more than a handful of events per year. At $8.33/month versus $19.99/month, the math is straightforward if you're following boxing through a full calendar year.

One thing worth noting: DAZN pricing has shifted over the years, and the current US price ($19.99/month) is higher than what early subscribers paid when the service launched. I've seen the frustration in reader feedback about these increases, but the rights portfolio has grown in tandem with the price. Always verify current pricing at DAZN.com before subscribing.


What Does DAZN Include? Sports Coverage Breakdown

Boxing: DAZN's Core Strength

DAZN's boxing coverage is the reason most US subscribers sign up, and it's legitimately the deepest boxing library in streaming:

| Content | Included? | |---|---| | Matchroom Boxing cards (global) | ✅ Included | | Canelo Álvarez fights | ✅ Included or PPV add-on | | Anthony Joshua fights | ✅ Included or PPV add-on | | Golden Boy Promotions (select) | ✅ Select events | | DAZN Boxing originals and documentaries | ✅ Included | | Biggest PPV superfights | ❌ Extra purchase required |

The volume of Matchroom Boxing events on DAZN is substantial — world title fights appear regularly across multiple weight classes throughout the year, not just on marquee Canelo weekends. If you want to follow boxing broadly rather than just tracking the top names, DAZN delivers more fight-night programming than ESPN+ does for boxing specifically.

For a complete look at how DAZN fits into the wider boxing streaming landscape — including how it splits rights with ESPN+ and where Premier Boxing Champions fights land — see our guide to watching boxing without cable.

MMA: Bellator Coverage

DAZN carries Bellator MMA events in the US. Bellator is the second-largest MMA organization globally and features a roster with recognizable names including Patricio Freire, Ryan Bader, and other elite fighters. If you follow Bellator specifically, DAZN is the correct subscription.

For UFC, DAZN is not the answer — ESPN+ holds exclusive US UFC rights. Our ESPN+ review covers what's included with UFC in detail.

Soccer: Geography-Dependent Value

This is where DAZN's geo-restriction issue is most visible. Soccer coverage on DAZN varies dramatically by country:

  • European markets: La Liga, Serie A, Champions League, and domestic leagues with significant depth
  • US market: More limited soccer library — select La Liga matches and international content, but not the comprehensive European soccer coverage available in other regions

US subscribers who sign up expecting a full European soccer package based on DAZN's global reputation may be disappointed. The service's soccer value in the US does not match what European subscribers receive. For extensive soccer coverage in the US, ESPN+ and Peacock (Premier League) currently offer better value for American subscribers.



DAZN PPV boxing event on screen showing Canelo Álvarez fight night on a streaming device, no cable required

DAZN PPV: How It Works

The biggest fights on DAZN — Canelo's highest-profile opponents, heavyweight title unifications, superfights — often come as PPV events on top of your base subscription. Here's how it works:

  • You need an active DAZN subscription to purchase PPV events
  • PPV events are bought through the DAZN app or DAZN.com
  • The fight then streams within the DAZN app on your streaming device
  • Typical cost: $59.99–$79.99 per event

This is a point of friction for some subscribers. You pay for the monthly or annual plan, and then the most-anticipated fights of the year require an additional purchase. This model isn't unique to DAZN — ESPN+ charges separately for UFC PPV events — but it's worth factoring into your annual budget if you intend to watch major events.

Based on published reporting from The Athletic and industry coverage, DAZN's PPV strategy has allowed it to acquire larger fight purses and more exclusive rights than a subscription-only model could support. The trade-off is real, but the alternative — not having these fights available on streaming at all — is worse for cord-cutters.


Streaming Quality and Device Support

DAZN streams at 1080p across supported devices, with Dolby Sound on compatible hardware. Based on published performance data and user reports, the 2025-2026 app update resolved many of the buffering and latency complaints associated with earlier versions of the service.

Supported devices:

  • Amazon Fire TV (all generations)
  • Roku (all major models)
  • Apple TV (4th gen and later)
  • Android TV / Google TV
  • Web browser (Chrome, Firefox, Safari)
  • iOS (iPhone, iPad)
  • Android mobile

Three simultaneous streams are included with one account, which is useful for households where multiple people might want to watch different events or where someone wants to watch on their phone while another uses the main TV.

For sports streaming device recommendations, our best streaming device for sports fans guide covers which hardware delivers the most reliable live sports performance.


DAZN vs. ESPN+: Which Is Right for Fight Fans?

This is the most common question I get from readers considering DAZN, and the honest answer depends on which fighters you follow:

| If you watch... | Service | Monthly cost | |---|---|---| | Canelo Álvarez, Anthony Joshua, Matchroom Boxing | DAZN | $19.99/mo | | UFC Fight Nights, Top Rank Boxing (Crawford, Lomachenko) | ESPN+ | $10.99/mo | | Both | DAZN + ESPN+ | ~$30/mo | | Bellator MMA | DAZN | $19.99/mo | | UFC + Bellator + Boxing | Both | ~$30/mo |

The honest assessment: most serious fight fans end up with both services. They cover different promoters with almost no overlap, and the combined cost of ~$30/month is still less than a standard cable package — and significantly less than cable plus the PPV events on top.

For a dedicated MMA fan focused on UFC specifically, ESPN+ delivers better value than DAZN at a lower price point. See our guide to watching UFC without cable for the full breakdown.


Geo-Restriction: The Biggest DAZN Limitation

I want to be direct about this because it catches international subscribers and traveling US users off guard: DAZN's content library is among the most geo-restricted in sports streaming.

What's available on DAZN in the UK is substantially different from what's available in the US, which differs from Germany, Canada, or Japan. Rights deals are licensed by territory, and DAZN holds different sports packages in different markets. If you travel internationally, you may find that events you expected to watch from the US version of the service are unavailable in your current location.

This is a structural reality of international sports rights, not something unique to DAZN's policies — but DAZN's international footprint makes the variability more noticeable than with US-only services like ESPN+.


DAZN Review: Who Should Subscribe in 2026

Strong fit:

  • Canelo Álvarez and Matchroom Boxing fans — DAZN is effectively the only way to watch these fights on streaming without cable
  • Bellator MMA viewers — DAZN is Bellator's streaming home in the US
  • Annual subscribers who watch 6+ events per year — At $99.99/year ($8.33/month), the value proposition is clear for active boxing fans

Worth considering:

  • Soccer fans outside the US — European and Latin American markets get substantially better soccer coverage

Probably not worth it:

  • Casual boxing fans who watch 1–2 fights per year — PPV costs may exceed subscription value
  • UFC-primary fans — ESPN+ covers UFC more comprehensively at a lower price
  • US subscribers wanting comprehensive soccer — ESPN+ and Peacock offer more relevant soccer rights for American audiences
  • NFL, NBA, MLB, or NHL fans — DAZN carries none of these sports in the US

Verdict: Is DAZN Worth It in 2026?

Yes — if boxing is your primary sport.

At $19.99/month (or $8.33/month on the annual plan), DAZN is the only streaming service that gives you consistent access to Matchroom Boxing, Canelo Álvarez, and the volume of world-title fight cards that serious boxing fans want. No other US streaming service replicates this content. If you follow these fighters, DAZN is not optional — it's the only legitimate streaming path.

The caveats are real: the geo-restricted library frustrates international users, the PPV add-on cost for the biggest fights stings, and US subscribers who want soccer will find ESPN+ or Peacock more appropriate for their needs.

For the complete cord-cutter sports setup, most fight fans combine DAZN (Matchroom boxing, Bellator) with ESPN+ (UFC, Top Rank boxing) at a combined ~$30/month — still well below cable pricing. If you're building that stack, DAZN and ESPN+ are the two core services. For a broader look at sports streaming options, see our best streaming service for sports roundup.

For the right viewer, DAZN earns its subscription. For casual fans or those primarily interested in other sports, the value calculus is harder to justify.


Pricing accurate as of April 2026. DAZN pricing and content availability vary by region and change over time — verify current pricing and available content at DAZN.com before subscribing.

E
Editorial Team

Our editorial team consists of streaming experts who research and test products so you can make informed buying decisions.

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