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How to watch the 2023 Women’s World Cup on TV in the UK and US

Sarah Hunter, Courtney Nevin, and Clare Hunt take selfies with the trophy during a tour at Taronga Zoo
Australia’s Sarah Hunter, Courtney Nevin, and Clare Hunt take a selfie with the Women’s World Cup as the trophy goes on tour around the joint host countries in the month before the opening game on July 20 – SAEED KHAN/AFP via Getty Images

The 2023 Fifa Women’s World Cup will be jointly hosted by Australia and New Zealand and begins on July 20. This ninth global tournament is split across nine cities and 10 venues, six in Australia and four in New Zealand.

The holders, USA, will be based in New Zealand for the group stages in their quest to win a hat-trick of world titles. England, the European champions and World Cup semi-finalists in 2015 and 2019, will play their Group D matches in Brisbane, Sydney and Adelaide.

With all but five of the 48 group games scheduled to take place in the late afternoon or evening across four distinct time zones, there will be a confusing melange of kick-off times but, with one eye on the US market, USA have been awarded two of the early kick-offs, both at Eden Park Auckland, which will be at 6pm (the day before) on the US West Coast and 9pm on the Eastern Seaboard.

How to watch in the UK

BBC and ITV submitted a joint bid and will share coverage of the games, ITV showing two of the group games, the BBC one while knockout games will be divided up at a later date. Both broadcasters will show the final.

All 64 matches will be shown across the BBC network, on ITV and ITV 4. The BBC also won live radio rights and will broadcast commentary on BBC Radio 5 Live and 5 Sports Extra.

Saturday, July 22
England vs Haiti, 10.30am BST, ITV

Friday July 28
England vs Denmark, 9.30am BBC

Tuesday August 1
China vs England, noon ITV

The final, on Sunday, August 20 starts at 11am in the UK.

The BBC’s coverage will be presented by Gabby Logan, Alex Scott and Reshmin Chowdhury. Pundits include Euro 2022 winner Ellen White, former Lionesses captain Steph Houghton and England’s most-capped player, Fara Williams

Alex Scott

BBC and ITV will share the tournament coverage – Alex Davidson/Getty Images

Wherever you are watching, take a look at these Women’s World Cup betting offers and free bets

How to watch in the United States

Fox has the English language rights to the World Cup for the third tournament in succession and will spread the games on Fox and FS1 while Peacock, Telemundo and Universo will broadcast the games in Spanish.

Fox has announced that their studio team includes Carli Lloyd, Karina Leblanc, Alexi Lalas, Ariana Hingst, Kate Gill, Stuart Holden and Heather O’Reilly while commentators include JP Dellacamera and Jacqui Oatley.

Friday, July 21
USA vs Vietnam, 9pm ET, 6pm Pacific

Wednesday, July 26
USA vs Netherlands, 9pm ET, 6pm Pacific

Tuesday, August 1
Portugal vs USA, 3am ET, midnight Pacific

The final, should they make it for the fourth successive World Cup, is on Sunday, August 20kick-off at 6am ET, 3am Pacific.

Controversy over TV rights

Fifa’s decision to unbundle the broadcasting rights for the Women’s World Cup from the men’s tournament for the first time provoked a bitter stand-off between the governing body and the “big five” European markets – UK, Germany, France, Italy and Spain.

Given that the scheduling in the southern hemisphere rules out any hope of prime-time kick-offs, the initial offers were low, as little as one percent of the offers for the men’s rights, provoking Gianni Infantino, the Fifa president, to call them a “slap in the face” to the players and “all women worldwide”.

After a long argument in the winter that spiraled into spring, Infantino took the doomsday option, threatening a media blackout for Europe’s traditional financial powerhouses. “It is our moral and legal obligation not to undersell the Fifa Women’s World Cup,” he said. “Therefore, should the offers continue not to be fair, we will be forced not to broadcast the Fifa’s Women’s World Cup into the ‘big five’ European countries.”

After six weeks of bargaining and rhetoric, a compromise was reached and a deal announced with the “big five” on June 15.

In the United States, long-standing agreements for both English and Spanish-language rights had been more straightforward.

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