How a VPN helps sports fans
Wherever you are, a VPN is essential for sports streaming.
If you’re traveling, whether overseas or just to a different TV market, connect to a VPN to access your favorite sports channels securely on any network. ExpressVPN sends your traffic through a private and encrypted tunnel, allowing you to watch and keeping your data safe from prying eyes while abroad.
If you’re watching at home, use a VPN to bypass ISP throttling. ExpressVPN makes your internet traffic more anonymous, so your ISP can’t identify and slow down your streams.
Whether you’re looking to stream football, tennis, boxing, or any other event, you can catch every second of the action with a VPN. Score!
Can I use a VPN to watch live sports on streaming services from another country?
ExpressVPN is a privacy and security service and should not be used as a means of copyright circumvention. We cannot see or control what you do while connected to our VPN, so you are responsible for complying with our Terms of Service, your content provider’s terms, and any applicable laws.
Top sports to stream
ExpressVPN has you covered with the top sports to stream each week! Here’s what events have caught our eye for the week of March 18:
NCAA College Basketball: March Madness (March 19-24, times vary, YouTube TV / DirecTV Stream / Paramount Plus [men’s only]): March Madness has finally arrived! Tristen Newton and UConn vie to become the first men’s team to win consecutive titles since the 2006-07 Florida Gators. On the women’s side, Caitlin Clark and Iowa seek the first championship in school history. Can the Hawkeyes avoid a first-weekend loss? Check out our men’s and women’s college basketball pages for more information on each tournament.
MLB: Seoul Series (March 20-21, 7:05 p.m. local time / 6:05 a.m. ET / 10:05 a.m. GMT, MLB.TV / YouTube TV / Fubo): Shohei Ohtani, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, and the reloaded Dodgers open the 2024 MLB season in South Korea against Fernando Tatis Jr. and the rival Padres. Look for Ohtani, the 700 million USD man, to put on a show in Seoul before returning stateside to duel the Cardinals next week.
Rugby: Women’s Six Nations (March 23-24, times vary, BBC / France TV / RTÉ / ITV): Peter O’Mahony and Ireland clinched their second consecutive men’s Six Nations title last weekend. Sounds impressive, right? Tell that to Marlie Packer and England, who enter Sunday’s opener against Italy with five straight Women’s Six Nations championships. Can anyone take down the Red Roses? Check out our Women’s Six Nations hub for ways to watch your favorite club!
Formula 1: Australian GP (March 24, 8 p.m. local time / 12 p.m. ET / 4 p.m. GMT, RTBF / Servus TV / 10 play / F1 TV Pro): Surprise, surprise: Max Verstappen won the 2024 Formula 1 season’s first two races. Will MVS triumph for the second straight year in Melbourne? Probably, yes, but don’t let that stop you from watching the Australian Grand Prix!