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Reviews·8 min

By Shamir

How to Stream Every Brazil Match at the 2026 World Cup

If you follow the Seleção, the FIFA World Cup 2026 schedule is really just one question repeated: where, and at what time, is Brazil playing next? With matches spread across 16 host cities and several North American time zones, that's harder to keep straight than it sounds — a group-stage opener in one city, the next match a time zone away, then a knockout run that could land anywhere from Vancouver to Miami.

This guide is for the Brazil fan specifically. It walks through a setup that pins every Brazil match to one screen — kickoff time, channel, reminder — so you spend the tournament watching football, not hunting for it.

What you need before kickoff

Brazil's group and full fixture list were confirmed when the tournament draw was made. To follow them, you need exactly two things:

  1. Your subscription. Whatever you already pay for — a broadcaster app, an IPTV provider's M3U URL, an Xtream Codes login, or a Stalker Portal. Brazil's matches will be on whichever rights holder serves your country (see the broadcaster list below).
  2. A player that handles a full guide. One app that takes your subscription, shows the program guide, and lets you favourite channels and set reminders. Tuneline is free, runs on Mac, Windows, Linux, Android, and Google TV, has no ads, and includes no channels of its own — you bring your subscription, it plays it.

That second point matters. Tuneline is a player, not a content service: it doesn't sell or bundle the World Cup, and it never will. Your relationship for the matches stays with your broadcaster; Tuneline's only job is to play your stream well and keep the schedule organised. (Why that model lasts longer: bring-your-own-playlist vs bundled IPTV apps.)

Where Brazil matches will air

Coverage depends on where you're watching from:

  • Brazil — TV Globo and SporTV hold the rights, with streaming via Globoplay.
  • United States — Telemundo and Universo carry the Spanish-language broadcast (with Brazilian and Latin American fans in mind); Fox / FS1 carry the English feed.
  • United Kingdom — BBC and ITV split the tournament; both stream free.
  • Portugal — RTP and other domestic rights holders.
  • Elsewhere — your national World Cup rights holder. If you're a Brazilian abroad, you'll typically use whichever broadcaster covers the tournament in your country of residence.

Tuneline plays the open streaming protocols your provider exposes — HLS, MPEG-TS over HTTP, or DASH wrapped in M3U or Xtream. Streams locked behind a broadcaster's own DRM need that broadcaster's app; for everything your IPTV provider serves you, the player handles it.

Step-by-step: a Brazil-match setup

1. Install the player

Download Tuneline for your device. It's the same free app on every platform, so the Mac in the living room and the phone in your pocket behave identically — and with cross-device sync, the favourites you set on one show up on the other. (How cross-device sync works.)

2. Add your subscription

Open Tuneline → source selector → Add Playlist. Enter your provider's M3U URL, Xtream Codes login (host, username, password), or Stalker Portal URL and MAC address. First time doing this? Follow how to add an M3U playlist step by step. If an Xtream login is refused, it's almost always the host URL — Xtream Codes login failed fix.

3. Load the EPG before the tournament

Tuneline auto-discovers the XMLTV guide from most providers. For an M3U source with no embedded guide, paste the provider's XMLTV URL into Settings → EPG → Custom guide URL. Do this in advance — guide URLs sometimes 404, and you want to know now. (EPG not loading fix.)

4. Favourite the channels Brazil will be on

In the sidebar, star the channels that will carry the Seleção where you live — Globo / SporTV, Telemundo / Universo, Fox, BBC, ITV, whichever apply. Tuneline pins favourites to the top of the channel list, so on a busy group-stage day Brazil's broadcaster is one click away, not buried.

5. Set a reminder on every Brazil match

With the EPG loaded, each match appears as a guide entry at its real kickoff time, converted to your local time zone. Open the guide, find Brazil's three group matches, and set a reminder on each — Tuneline nudges you before kickoff. As the knockout bracket fills in, repeat for each round. You never have to do time-zone maths or memorise a fixture list.

6. Test fullscreen and your worst connection

Play any stream, press F for fullscreen, and confirm it's smooth. Then test from wherever you'll actually be watching — if that's Wi-Fi from the back bedroom, play ten uninterrupted minutes from that exact spot. If it stutters, you have time to fix it before kickoff. (Slow internet settings that help.)

Following Brazil through the knockout rounds

The group stage is the easy part — three fixed matches. The knockout bracket is where fans lose track, because Brazil's next opponent, city, and kickoff time aren't known until the previous round finishes.

The fix is the same EPG you already loaded. As each round is decided, your provider's guide updates with the new fixtures; Brazil's next match shows up automatically with the correct time. Keep the habit from step 5 — when Brazil advances, open the guide and set the reminder for the next round. If you want to keep the daytime knockout matches you can't watch live, recording is built in on Windows, Linux, and Android — see how to record live TV.

Troubleshooting cheat-sheet

Frequently asked questions

Where can I watch Brazil's World Cup 2026 matches?

On your country's official rights holder — Globo / SporTV in Brazil, Telemundo or Fox in the US, BBC / ITV in the UK, and so on. Tuneline plays the stream from whichever subscription you have; it doesn't carry the matches itself.

Does Tuneline include the World Cup or any channels?

No. Tuneline is a free player with no ads and no bundled content. You supply a subscription from a broadcaster or provider you already pay for, and Tuneline plays it. It will never sell or include channels.

How do I know when Brazil plays next?

Load your provider's EPG into Tuneline. Every Brazil match appears in the guide at its real kickoff time, converted to your local time zone. Set a reminder and the player alerts you before kickoff — including knockout matches, which update in the guide as each round is decided.

Can I watch Brazil matches on more than one device?

Yes. Tuneline runs on Mac, Windows, Linux, Android, and Google TV, and cross-device sync carries your favourites and history across them — set up on your laptop, watch on the TV. See cross-device sync.

Can I record Brazil's daytime matches?

On Windows, Linux, and Android, yes — recording is built in. See how to record live TV. It's the cleanest way to catch a group-stage match that kicks off while you're at work.

Is it legal?

Tuneline is a media player, like VLC — completely legal. What you point it at is your responsibility: use a subscription you legitimately pay for, from a licensed broadcaster or provider. The player doesn't change the legality of your source either way.

The short answer

Install Tuneline, add your subscription, load the EPG before the tournament, favourite the channel Brazil will be on, and set a reminder on each match. From the opener to a possible July 19 final at MetLife Stadium, every Brazil match lands on one screen with the right kickoff time.

For the full tournament schedule see the World Cup 2026 fixtures guide, for the Argentina-fan version see how to stream every Argentina match, and for the complete pre-tournament setup start with the cornerstone World Cup IPTV player guide.

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