
Breathe easy, football fans. The wait is finally over.
Just days before the opening kickoff, Zee Entertainment has officially secured the FIFA World Cup 2026 India broadcasting rights – and honestly, it was a nail-biter till the very end .
For weeks, Indian football fans were left wondering: Where will we watch the World Cup? Will it be JioStar? Will it be someone else? Will we be scrambling for illegal streams at 3 AM?
None of that matters now.
ZEE5 and Unite8 Sports are here to save the day. And not just for 2026 – but all the way through 2034 .
Yes, you read that right. The next three men’s World Cups, the Women’s World Cup, youth tournaments, futsal, and more. All on Zee. All under one roof.
Let me break down everything you need to know. No jargon. No fluff. Just straight talk for the desi football fan. ⚽🇮🇳
The Deal: What Zee Actually Bought (Spoiler: It’s Massive)
This isn’t just a “one-tournament-and-done” kind of deal.
Zee Entertainment has signed a long-term agreement with FIFA that runs until 2034, covering a jaw-dropping 39 FIFA events .
Here’s what Indian fans will be watching on ZEE5 and Unite8 Sports over the next decade:
| Tournament | Year(s) |
|---|---|
| FIFA World Cup 2026 (USA, Mexico, Canada) | 2026 |
| FIFA Women’s World Cup | 2027 |
| FIFA World Cup 2030 (Morocco, Portugal, Spain) | 2030 |
| FIFA U-17, U-20 World Cups (Men & Women) | Various |
| FIFA Futsal World Cups | Various |
| FIFA Intercontinental Cup | Various |
That means generations of Indian football fans will grow up knowing exactly where to find the beautiful game. No more rights switching every two years. No more confusion .
As Zee Entertainment CEO Punit Goenka put it:
“Football cuts across regions and demographics, and the investments in garnering the media rights and launching dedicated sports channels reflect our clear belief in its long-term potential.”
Translation? Zee is all in on football. And honestly, that’s great news for us.
Where to Watch FIFA World Cup 2026 in India
Two options. Pick your vibe.
📺 On TV: Unite8 Sports Channels
Zee has launched four dedicated sports channels under the Unite8 Sports brand, and they’re your TV destination for the World Cup .
| Channel | Language | Monthly Price |
|---|---|---|
| Unite8 Sports 1 | Hindi | ₹7 |
| Unite8 Sports 1 HD | Hindi | ₹9 |
| Unite8 Sports 2 | English | ₹8 |
| Unite8 Sports 2 HD | English | ₹11 |
Yes, you read those prices right. Starting at just ₹7 a month. That’s less than a cutting chai.
For cable and DTH subscribers, this is an absolute steal.
📱 On Mobile/Web: ZEE5 Live Streaming
Prefer watching on your phone, laptop, or smart TV? ZEE5 has you covered with live streaming of all 104 matches .
Here are the ZEE5 subscription plans for the World Cup:
| Plan | Price | Duration | Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| All Access + Sports | ₹799 | 3 months | Ad-supported, covers entire World Cup (June 11 – July 19) |
| Premium Annual Plan | ₹1,699 | 12 months | 4K Ultra HD, Dolby Atmos, ad-free, 4 devices at once |
The ₹799 plan works out to roughly ₹266 per month – which is honestly not bad for 104 live matches, plus all the pre-game and post-game analysis .
Pro tip: Before buying a ZEE5 subscription, check if your Airtel, Jio, or Vi plan already bundles ZEE5 Premium. Many telecom and broadband plans include OTT subscriptions these days. You might already have access without spending an extra rupee .
The Time Zone Challenge: Will You Stay Up?
Okay, let’s address the elephant in the room.
The 2022 World Cup in Qatar was a dream for Indian fans – matches in the evening, prime-time viewing, dinner with football.
2026 is… different.
The tournament is being hosted across USA, Mexico, and Canada – which means North American time zones. For us in India, that translates to overnight matches .
Most matches will kick off between 12:30 AM IST and 8:30 AM IST. The early group-stage games might be easier to catch, but the knockout rounds? Yeah, you’re going to need coffee. And maybe a nap strategy.
But hey – if there’s one thing Indian football fans are known for, it’s passion. We stayed up for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil. We stayed up for the 2018 World Cup in Russia. We’ll stay up for this one too.
Some things are worth the sleep deprivation. ☕😴⚽
The Dream Team: Zee’s Star-Studded Commentary Panel
Here’s where Zee has truly outdone themselves.
They’ve assembled a multilingual commentary and analysis panel that reads like a who’s-who of Indian football .
🇬🇧 English Coverage
- Bhaichung Bhutia – Indian football royalty, former national team captain
- Igor Stimac – Former India head coach (yes, that Igor Stimac)
- Ashley Westwood – Kerala Blasters coach
- Paul Masefield – Veteran football analyst
- Seema Jaswal – British presenter and journalist
🇮🇳 Hindi Coverage
- Gurpreet Singh Sandhu – Current India national team goalkeeper and captain
- Aditi Chauhan – Former India women’s goalkeeper
- Mehrajuddin Wadoo – Former India defender
- Sahil Khattar, Manish Batavia, Atish Thukral – Popular Hindi sports broadcasters
🇲🇱 Malayalam Coverage
- IM Vijayan – Kerala football legend, former India captain
- Jo Paul, NP Pradeep, Shyju Damodaran – Beloved voices for Malayali football fans
🇧🇩 Bengali Coverage
- Arnab Mondal – Former India captain and defender
- Rajat Ghosh-Dastidar, Debjit Ghosh – Trusted Bengali football voices
Robin Singh and Karan Sawhney will contribute across both English and Hindi feeds .
What’s beautiful about this lineup? It’s not just national coverage – it’s regional. Zee is speaking to football fans in Bengali and Malayalam, acknowledging that some of India’s most passionate football communities are in Kerala and West Bengal .
As Bhaichung Bhutia said:
“For generations of football fans in India, the FIFA World Cup has been a source of inspiration, aspiration, and unforgettable memories. It is a tournament that transcends sport and unites people through a shared passion for the game.”
Couldn’t have said it better myself.
Key Dates: Your FIFA World Cup 2026 Calendar
Mark these dates, folks. This is your life for the next month.
| Stage | Dates (IST) |
|---|---|
| Opening Match | June 11, 2026 |
| Group Stage Round 1 | June 11 – June 17 |
| Group Stage Round 2 | June 18 – June 23 |
| Group Stage Round 3 | June 24 – June 27 |
| Round of 32 | June 28 – July 3 |
| Round of 16 | July 4 – July 7 |
| Quarterfinals | July 9 – July 11 |
| Semifinals | July 14 – July 15 |
| Third Place Match | July 18 |
| FIFA World Cup 2026 Final | July 19, 2026 |
104 matches. 32 days. One champion.
Why This World Cup Is Different: 48 Teams, New Format
The 2026 FIFA World Cup is making history.
For the first time ever, 48 teams will compete – up from 32 in previous tournaments .
That means more nations. More stories. More underdog moments. More chaos. More magic.
The format has also changed:
- 12 groups of 4 teams (instead of 8 groups of 4)
- Top 2 from each group advance
- Plus 8 best third-place teams advance to the Round of 32
So yes, there’s a path for almost everyone. And that means more drama till the very last group-stage whistle.
Will we see a Morocco-like run in 2026? Will a debutant nation shock the world? Will India ever qualify? (Okay, maybe not yet. But a fan can dream.)
The Backstory: Why the Deal Took So Long
If you’ve been following the news, you know this deal was anything but certain.
Reports suggest FIFA initially asked for close to $100 million for the Indian rights package. When broadcasters balked, FIFA eventually lowered expectations .
Part of the hesitation? Time zones.
Unlike Qatar 2022 – which aired in glorious Indian prime time – the North American 2026 World Cup will largely air overnight. Advertisers are less excited. Broadcasters are more cautious .
But Zee stepped up. And honestly? Thank God they did.
The alternative was no official broadcaster. And no Indian football fan deserves to scramble for illegal streams at 3 AM.
Zee’s return to major sports broadcasting is also noteworthy. The company sold Ten Sports to Sony nearly a decade ago for $385 million and stepped away from the sports game. Now, with Unite8 Sports and this FIFA deal, they’re back. And they mean business .
So, Should You Get the ZEE5 Plan?
Here’s my honest take.
| If you… | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Only want to watch the World Cup and don’t mind ads | Get the ₹799 All Access + Sports plan. Covers June 11 to July 19 perfectly. |
| Want 4K, ad-free, and also love ZEE5’s movies/shows | Get the ₹1,699 Premium Annual Plan. Better value long-term. |
| Have a DTH/cable connection and prefer TV | Subscribe to Unite8 Sports 1 or 2 (₹7-₹11/month). Cheapest option. |
| Have an existing Airtel/Jio/Vi plan | Check if ZEE5 is already bundled. You might pay ₹0 extra. |
My personal pick? If you’re a hardcore football fan watching every match, get the ₹799 ZEE5 plan. The flexibility of watching on your phone, laptop, or TV is worth it. Plus, you can rewatch highlights if you (inevitably) fall asleep during the 3 AM matches.
If you’re a casual viewer who just wants the big matches on TV, ₹7 for Unite8 Sports is an absolute no-brainer.
Final Whistle: Why This Matters for Indian Football
This deal isn’t just about 2026. It’s about the next decade of football in India.
When fans have reliable, affordable, legal access to the world’s biggest tournament, something beautiful happens:
- Kids get inspired.
- Parents stay up watching matches with their children.
- Football conversations happen in offices, schools, and chai taps.
- The sport grows.
Zee’s investment – launching four dedicated sports channels, assembling a world-class commentary panel in four languages, and committing to 39 FIFA events through 2034 – is a statement.
Indian football matters.
And starting June 11, 2026, we finally know exactly where to watch the beautiful game.
⚽ Where will you be watching the FIFA World Cup 2026? ZEE5 or Unite8 Sports? Drop your answer in the comments below!
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