
Somewhere in a conference room, lawyers from YouTube and the NFL are finalizing a deal that changes how America watches football. Five games. Exclusive. No cable backup. No broadcast alternative. Only a streaming platform and a login screen stand between fans and kickoff. The package reportedly draws from a menu that includes the Week 1 Australia opener, a Thanksgiving Eve game, a second Black Friday window, and a Christmas Eve game. Holiday football is locked behind a paywall. This is just one piece of a much larger play the league is running on its fans.
YouTube already committed more than $2 billion per year over a seven-year deal for NFL Sunday Ticket rights in 2023. That deal proved the platform could handle live football at scale. The NFL is rewarding that investment with something bigger: exclusive regular-season windows unavailable to other platforms. The long-form contract review stage, according to Front Office Sports, typically signals a deal is nearly complete. Netflix and Fox also bid for this package. YouTube won. Completion is expected within weeks, as the NFL works to finalize all new media deals before September.
ESPN’s acquisition of NFL Network freed four game windows previously airing at 9:30 AM ET. The NFL kept those windows from broadcast partners. It repackaged them, added the Melbourne opener, and auctioned the bundle to streamers at premium prices. Wall Street analysts project Amazon, YouTube, and Netflix each landing five-game packages. This shift moves approximately 15 games from free television to paid streaming. More platforms now compete for fewer games, but costs have increased for fans.
The NFL currently earns approximately $10 billion annually from media rights. The league wants closer to $20 billion. Roughly a 100% increase. CBS alone pays $2.1 billion per year and would owe significantly more under that target. Broadcast partners have signaled openness to meaningful increases, but well short of doubling, leaving a multi-billion-dollar gap. So the NFL fills that gap by selling exclusive windows to streamers willing to overpay for scarcity. Five games here. Five games there. Each one another subscription fans have to carry.
The Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961 gave the NFL an antitrust exemption to negotiate television deals collectively. That exemption covers broadcast television. Not cable. Not satellite. Not streaming. The NFL has built its entire modern distribution strategy inside that gap. Every exclusive streaming window operates in legal territory the 1961 law never anticipated. The DOJ opened an antitrust investigation. The FCC collected thousands of public comments on sports broadcast distribution. But the regulatory tools were designed for an era of rabbit ears and three channels.
Watching every NFL game now requires Netflix at $15 to $22 a month, Prime Video at $14.99, Peacock at $5.99 to $11.99, ESPN+ at $10.99, YouTube TV at roughly $82.99, and NFL+ Premium at $13.99. The total ranges between $140 and $180 per month. A cable bundle used to cost $80 to $100 and included all games. For football fans, the cost has nearly doubled. Each provider locks content behind its own subscription.
Traditional broadcast networks now pay more while receiving fewer games. That cost gets passed to advertisers, then to consumers. Casual fans and lower-income households face a choice: subscribe to everything or accept missing games. The NFL scheduled a record number of international games for 2026, including first-ever contests in Melbourne, Madrid, and Rio de Janeiro. Premium international windows are now the inventory being sold to streamers. The league is expanding its presence worldwide and reducing affordable access at home.
A government official described the DOJ investigation as being “about affordability and creating an even playing field for providers.” A 2024 federal jury awarded $4.7 billion in damages after ruling the NFL violated antitrust law in distributing out-of-market Sunday games. A judge later overturned the verdict, citing flawed expert testimony. Had triple damages applied, the NFL faced roughly $14.1 billion in liability. The law designed to prevent monopolistic control now confronts a fragmentation strategy that has further restricted access.
YouTube’s package is one of three expected streaming bundles. Netflix is reported to be in line for its own five-game package, and Amazon already owns Thursday Night Football. New full-season deals are expected to run into the early 2030s. This approach will govern the NFL’s media model for nearly a decade. Other major sports leagues are observing the outcome. If the NFL increases media revenue through streaming fragmentation, the NBA, NHL, and MLB may follow. Football is the test case. Other sports could be next.
Congress could modernize the Sports Broadcasting Act to cover streaming. The FCC could impose rules requiring certain games on free television. Neither has happened. The DOJ investigation moves at government speed while corporate deals close at market speed. The vast majority of NFL games still air on broadcast television, which gives the league just enough cover to argue access remains broad. That share shrinks every negotiation cycle. The fan who used to flip on the TV and find football now opens an app, hits a paywall, and decides whether this week’s game is worth another $15.
Sources:
Glasspiegel, Ryan. “NFL, YouTube in Advanced Talks for 5-Game Package.” Front Office Sports, April 15, 2026.
Florio, Mike. “YouTube, NFL move toward deal for five 2026 games.” NBC Sports, April 15, 2026.
Maese, Rick. “Report: YouTube nearing deal for 5-game NFL package.” Reuters, April 16, 2026.
Maske, Mark. “Federal judge overturns $4.7 billion verdict in ‘Sunday Ticket’ lawsuit, rules for NFL.” NFL.com, August 1, 2024.
Young, Jabari. “NFL Sunday Ticket goes to YouTube in $2 billion annual deal.” CNBC, December 22, 2022.
Novy-Williams, Eben. “Justice Department investigating NFL over broadcast rights, fan access concerns.” CBS Sports, April 8, 2026.
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