Why watching football has turned into a big monthly bill
Not long ago, football was simple to follow. Most matches were either on Sky or shown free on normal telly.
Now the whole thing is spread across so many platforms that watching your own team can feel like a part-time job.

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Premier League games are divided between Sky Sports, TNT Sports and a small number on Amazon Prime.
European nights are on TNT for now, but the Champions League moves to Paramount from 2027, while Sky takes over the Europa League and Conference League.
La Liga sits on Premier Sports, and some matches even appear on Disney+. Women’s Champions League games are heading to Disney+ too, with some highlights still free.
Each of these changes adds another subscription. None of them are huge on their own, but when you stack them up, your monthly spend quietly gets bigger.
Before you know it, watching football is costing as much as some people pay for their weekly food shop.
Let’s break down what it costs if you try to watch “almost everything” and then look at how to cut that bill.
Premier League and English football
To watch a big chunk of Premier League football in the UK, you usually need:
- Sky Sports: standard price around £33 a month, sometimes cheaper in offers for new customers.
- TNT Sports: about £30 to £34 a month on a monthly pass through Discovery+ or BT.
- Amazon Prime: £8.99 a month for Prime, which includes their limited rounds of live Premier League games.
That means you can easily be at around £70 a month just to cover most live Premier League matches, before you even add broadband.
On top of that, a TV licence costs £174.50 a year, which is roughly £14.50 a month paid by direct debit, if you watch live TV or use BBC iPlayer.
Europe and cup competitions
Right now, TNT Sports carries live Champions League, Europa League and Conference League games until the 2026–27 season.
From 2027, that changes:
- Paramount will show almost all Champions League matches in the UK for four seasons.
- Amazon Prime keeps a first-pick Tuesday night game.
- Sky Sports takes over all Europa League and Conference League games.
Paramount+ currently costs £4.99 a month for the Basic plan with ads or £7.99 for the standard ad-free plan, with a Premium tier at £10.99. Sky Cinema customers get the Basic Paramount+ tier included and can pay to upgrade.
So if you want every big European competition right now, you need TNT. From 2027, you will be looking at Sky Sports, Paramount+ and Amazon instead.
Other big leagues and women’s football
If you want to follow more than just English sides, the costs grow again.
- La Liga: shown on Premier Sports in the UK, often around £15.99 a month as an add-on.
- Women’s Champions League: moving onto Disney+ from the 2025–26 season, with one match a week still free-to-air in some countries.
- Disney+ now has three tiers in the UK, with Standard at £9.99 a month and Premium at £14.99 after price rises.
You can see the pattern. Every league and competition seems to live on another service.

Skint Dad says:
On paper it is ‘just’ £10 here and £30 there. Add it up and you realise your football habit is starting to look like a second council tax bill.
If you tried to watch almost everything
Let’s say you want to watch:
- Most Premier League games
- European club games
- Some La Liga
- Some top women’s football
At current typical prices, a rough monthly stack could look like:
- TV licence: about £14.50
- Sky Sports: around £33
- TNT Sports monthly pass: around £30.99
- Amazon Prime: £8.99
- Premier Sports: about £15.99
- Disney+ Standard: £9.99
That comes to around £113 a month, and this is before Paramount+ joins the list for Champions League from 2027 and before you pay for broadband strong enough to stream it all smoothly.
Even if you dropped a service or two, it is very easy to spend £70 to £90 a month on football alone.
How to cut your football TV bill
The good news is you do not have to pay for everything, all the time. A few simple tricks can save hundreds a year.
Rotate your subscriptions
You do not need every app 12 months a year. Follow your team’s fixtures and only pay for the service that actually shows their games that month. Cancel once their run in a competition ends.
Pick one main league
Choose the competition you care about most and build your setup around that. For many families, that is the Premier League, so they choose Sky Sports plus the odd month of TNT or Amazon when needed, instead of paying for every league on earth.
Use deals and bundles
Look out for:
- Sky or Virgin bundles that include sports and broadband at a lower combined price
- Prime free trials or cut-price months
- Paramount+ included with Sky Cinema
- Mobile deals that include Disney+ or similar as a perk
Grabbing the right bundle can chop a fair bit off the headline price.
Share legally within your home
Most services allow multiple profiles and streams on one account. Check the rules, then split the bill fairly between adults in the same household instead of each person having their own login.
Use free options where you can
Match of the Day, BBC radio, highlights shows, free-to-air finals and clips on YouTube all help you keep up without another subscription.
Final thought
Football is not just a game any more, it is a line on the household budget.
Before you sign up to yet another streaming app, work out which leagues you truly care about, which months you actually watch, and where you can switch services off.
Your team might go full attack, but your bank account needs a solid defence.
- Lidl is giving away £100 shopping vouchers hidden inside free gingerbread kits - 21 November 2025
- How much it costs to watch every major football league in the UK (and how to cut it) - 21 November 2025
- Champions League moves to Paramount: how much will it cost to follow your team? - 21 November 2025
