UK boxing in 2025-26 is concentrated on DAZN UK, with Sky Sports retaining a legacy PPV calendar and BBC Sport covering amateur boxing and select pro events. The 2024 DAZN-Matchroom-Queensberry consolidation moved the bulk of UK boxing’s regular slate to DAZN.
The 2025-26 UK broadcaster map
DAZN UK at £24.99 per month carries the Matchroom Boxing and Queensberry Promotions shared card calendar. The 2024 unification deal that brought Eddie Hearn’s Matchroom and Frank Warren’s Queensberry together on DAZN was the largest single move in UK boxing broadcast history. The full regular-season card calendar runs on DAZN as part of the subscription, with the largest events requiring an additional DAZN PPV purchase.
Sky Sports Box Office carries the legacy PPV slate — events from Eddie Hearn’s pre-DAZN era that retain Sky carriage, plus the small handful of UK boxing events that fall outside the Matchroom-Queensberry-DAZN deal. Sky Box Office PPV is priced at £19.95 to £24.95 per event, separate from the Sky Sports subscription.
BBC Sport carries amateur boxing (Olympic and Commonwealth qualifying), the Queensberry FA Cup-equivalent amateur calendar, and select pro events that fall under public-broadcaster carriage. BBC is free-to-air and accessible via BBC iPlayer.
TNT Sports carries select PPV main events under sub-licensing deals. These are exceptional cards rather than a regular slate, and the announcement comes per-event.
How PPV pricing works in the UK
The two active UK boxing PPV vendors price differently in 2025-26:
- DAZN PPV (Matchroom and Queensberry headliners): £19.99 to £24.99 per card on top of the DAZN subscription. The largest cards may price at £29.99.
- Sky Sports Box Office (legacy promoters): £19.95 to £24.95 per card. No subscription required beyond the PPV purchase.
A practical UK viewing plan
For a fan tracking the regular UK boxing calendar, the minimum subscription footprint is DAZN UK at £24.99 per month. That covers every Matchroom and Queensberry card. PPV cards remain separate.
For a fan who only watches the largest events, the cheapest option is to skip the DAZN subscription and purchase Box Office PPV per-event from either DAZN or Sky.
For free amateur and select pro coverage, BBC Sport and BBC iPlayer carry the public-broadcaster calendar at no cost.
What is not on the UK calendar
US-only events from PBC (Premier Boxing Champions, on Amazon Prime Video in the US) do not have UK carriage. PBC’s biggest cards occasionally pick up TNT Sports sub-licensing for the UK, but the regular PBC slate is not accessible to UK viewers through any legal channel.