The 2026 World Cup gives Fox One its best shot at breaking through a crowded streaming market — but keeping those subscribers after the final whistle is the real challenge.
When the 2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off June 11, Fox One — the direct-to-consumer streaming service Fox Corporation launched in August 2025 — gets a rare opportunity to acquire subscribers at scale in a market where most new entrants fail to retain audiences beyond an initial surge.
"The World Cup is a massive acquisition funnel, but the real test begins July 19," said Michael Nathanson, senior media analyst at MoffettNathanson. "Fox One needs a retention playbook ready before the final match ends."
Fox One, priced at $19.99 per month, will stream all 104 World Cup matches, including 72 broadcast on local Fox affiliates and 32 on FS1. The tournament spans six weeks across 16 U.S. cities, with the U.S. Men's National Team opening against Paraguay on June 12 in Los Angeles. Fox Corp. acquired the English-language rights as part of its broader media portfolio, which also includes the NFL and MLB.
Fox Corp. trades at roughly 12x forward earnings, a discount to Disney at 18x and Warner Bros. Discovery at 14x, reflecting investor skepticism about the company's ability to transition from linear TV to streaming. Successfully converting World Cup viewers into long-term subscribers could narrow that gap by demonstrating Fox One's viability as a standalone DTC business.
The streaming market is littered with platforms that launched with fanfare only to fade. CNN+ shut down after one month. Peacock, despite the Olympics and Premier League, has yet to turn a profit. Paramount+ and Discovery+ merged amid mounting losses. Fox One faces the same churn risk: viewers sign up for a single event, then cancel.
Fox Corp. has structured Fox One to mitigate that risk. Unlike many streaming services that rely on a broad content library, Fox One focuses on live sports and news — categories with inherently lower churn because they are appointment-based rather than binge-driven. The World Cup serves as both a subscriber acquisition event and a stress test for the platform's infrastructure.
"Live sports is the one category where streaming services have proven they can retain subscribers beyond a single event," said Brandon Ross, partner at LightShed Partners. "The question is whether Fox One's content lineup outside the World Cup — NFL, MLB, and Fox News — is enough to keep cord-cutters from bouncing."
Fox Corp. has not disclosed Fox One subscriber numbers since its launch, but analysts estimate the platform needs 3 million to 5 million subscribers to reach breakeven, based on comparable streaming services. The World Cup could deliver 1 million to 2 million new sign-ups, according to MoffettNathanson estimates, but retention rates for sports-driven streaming typically range from 40 percent to 60 percent after the event ends.
Competitive Pressure Mounts
Fox One enters the World Cup at a moment when the streaming market is consolidating. Disney, Warner Bros. Discovery, and Fox Corp. jointly own Venu Sports, a sports streaming bundle that launched in 2024 but has struggled to gain traction. Meanwhile, Amazon Prime Video and Apple TV+ continue to acquire sports rights, driving up content costs across the industry.
The World Cup also presents a direct competitive test against Telemundo, which holds Spanish-language rights and will stream matches on Peacock. Spanish-language viewership accounted for 35 percent of total U.S. World Cup viewership in 2022, according to Nielsen data, making it a critical demographic for Fox One's advertising revenue.
The Retention Challenge
Fox Corp. is betting that Fox One's integration with its linear TV ecosystem will improve retention. Subscribers who sign up for the World Cup gain access to Fox's NFL coverage starting in September, MLB postseason in October, and college football through the fall. The company is also bundling Fox One with its ad-supported Fox News streaming service, Fox Weather, and local Fox station apps.
Still, the math is unforgiving. If Fox One acquires 1.5 million World Cup subscribers and retains 50 percent through year-end, that adds roughly 750,000 subscribers — worth about $180 million in annual revenue at $19.99 per month. Against Fox Corp.'s $14 billion in annual revenue, that is incremental but not transformative.
Fox Corp. shares have gained 8 percent year-to-date, outperforming the S&P 500's media sector index, which is down 3 percent. The World Cup outcome could determine whether that premium holds.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.