NEW YORK, NEW YORK – MAY 21: Fox Sports previews its FIFA World Cup 2026 coverage at media day in New York. (Photo by John Nacion/FOX Sports via Getty Images)
FOX Sports via Getty Images
When the 2026 FIFA World Cup opens on June 11, Fox will not be treating streaming as a single strategy. It will use the tournament to serve two very different platforms.
The opening match, Mexico vs. South Africa, will stream free in 4K on Tubi, along with the U.S. men’s national team opener against Paraguay the following day. At the same time, every one of the tournament’s 104 matches will stream live and on demand in 4K on Fox One, the company’s paid direct-to-consumer service.
That means Fox is entering the biggest soccer event in its history with two streaming propositions: one free and built for reach, the other paid and built for subscriber conversion. The distinction is not cosmetic: only one of those businesses has already proved its place in Fox’s portfolio.
Fox One Gets The Subscriber Test
Fox One is the newer and less proven bet. The service launched in August 2025 at $19.99 a month, bringing Fox News, Fox Sports, FS1, FS2, Fox Business, Fox Weather, Fox Deportes, Big Ten Network, local Fox stations and the Fox broadcast network into one direct-to-consumer product.
For cord-cutters and cord-nevers, that bundle gives Fox a cleaner way to sell live programming outside the traditional payTV package. The World Cup is its biggest sports test so far.
Fox Sports has said all 104 World Cup matches will air across Fox and FS1, including a record 70 matches on the Fox broadcast network and 34 on FS1. Every match will also stream on Fox One in 4K. That gives Fox One a clear acquisition hook: the full English-language World Cup schedule in one paid product.
The question is not whether the tournament will attract some sign-ups. A five-week global sports event should do that. The more important question is whether those subscribers remain after the final on July 19.
That is the unresolved part of Fox One’s World Cup strategy. Sports can create urgency, but urgency is not the same as habit. Once the tournament ends, Fox One has to hold viewers with the rest of the Fox portfolio, especially news and other live programming. The World Cup may prove that Fox One can acquire subscribers. It will not, by itself, prove that it can retain them.
Tubi Plays A Different Game
Tubi’s role is almost the opposite. There is no subscription to sell. It is free, ad-supported and already operates at scale: the platform said in 2025 that it had exceeded 100 million monthly active users and surpassed 1 billion hours of viewing in a single month. Fox reported continued digital growth led by Tubi in its fiscal third-quarter results, and on the company’s earnings call Lachlan Murdoch said Tubi revenue grew “a healthy 23%” in the quarter, with total view time up 19%. That makes Tubi the more established asset, and its World Cup job is not conversion. It is reach.
Tubi has built a dedicated World Cup hub with simulcasts, highlights, recaps, originals and creator-led shows, and it will carry the opening ceremonies and two live matches in 4K: Mexico vs. South Africa on June 11 and USMNT vs. Paraguay on June 12. That is a limited offering, but it is enough to pull casual fans, younger viewers and non-payTV audiences into the platform. The creator-led programming also places Tubi inside a broader shift in World Cup coverage, one in which FIFA and TikTok have named 30 global creators as tournament correspondents.
That is useful for Fox because Tubi reaches viewers who may be less likely to buy another streaming subscription. A free World Cup experience can introduce them to its broader programming without asking them to pay first.
The World Cup Business Still Runs Through Fox And FS1
The streaming contrast should not obscure the larger business model. The World Cup’s main financial return for Fox still runs through its broadcast and cable sports platforms.
Fox’s schedule puts all 104 matches across Fox and FS1, with 70 on the broadcast network and 34 on FS1. The company has also emphasized the scale of the tournament as a live-programming event, with 340 hours of first-run programming planned across Fox Sports platforms.
That is where the advertising inventory sits. Fox One and Tubi extend the event into streaming, but they do not carry the same job.
Fox One is a paid distribution experiment: can premium live sports help build a direct-to-consumer base? Tubi is a free reach engine: can a major live event bring more users into a platform that is already showing momentum? Broadcast and cable remain the economic center of gravity.
What Fox Will Know After July
Fox is using the World Cup to answer two separate questions.
For Fox One, the question is retention. If fans subscribe for the World Cup and stay for news, football, baseball, college sports and entertainment, the tournament will have done more than create a temporary spike.
For Tubi, the question is habit. If free World Cup exposure leads viewers to return for highlights, creator programming, originals or library content, the platform’s limited live-match offering will have served its purpose.
That is why Fox’s two streaming bets should not be judged the same way. Fox One has to prove that sports can build a lasting paid relationship. Tubi only has to prove that the World Cup can deepen an audience relationship it already has.
One is a test of conversion. The other is a test of reach. Only Tubi enters the tournament with the stronger proof point.

