US Trends

where can we watch the olympics

You can watch the Olympics through official TV broadcasters in your country, major streaming services that carry those channels, and the IOC’s own digital platforms.

Main ways to watch (global overview)

  • In many countries, a single major broadcaster has the rights (for example, NBCUniversal in the United States, the BBC and partners in the UK, CBC in Canada, Nine Network in Australia). These channels usually show live events, highlight shows, and replays.
  • Most of those broadcasters also stream the Games on their own apps or sites (for example, Peacock and NBCOlympics.com in the U.S., BBC iPlayer in the UK, CBC Gem in Canada, 9Now in Australia). You sign in with either a paid subscription or a TV-provider login, depending on the country.
  • The official Olympics website and app focus on schedules, highlights, news, and some video content, and they also link you to the correct “where to watch” page for your country.

If you’re not sure who has the rights where you live, search “where to watch Olympic Games live” plus your country name and check that the site is listed on the official Olympics or local broadcaster pages.

If you’re in the United States

  • TV (no streaming): You can watch on NBC, USA Network, and CNBC through cable, satellite, or a TV antenna for local NBC stations, which is a low-cost way to get some live coverage and big events.
  • Streaming (paid): Peacock is the central streaming home, carrying live coverage of every event plus replays and highlights; you just need a paid Peacock subscription and compatible device (phone, tablet, smart TV, or computer browser). NBCOlympics.com, NBC.com, the NBC Sports app, and the NBC app also carry extensive authenticated streams if you sign in with your TV provider.
  • On the go: You can watch on phones and tablets using the Peacock or NBC apps, or via supported browsers on laptops and desktops.

Quick US viewing paths (example)

  1. Want everything in one place: subscribe to Peacock, install the app on your TV/phone, and look for the Olympics section once the Games begin.
  1. Already have cable/satellite: tune to NBC, USA Network, or CNBC on TV, and use your provider login on NBCOlympics.com or the NBC Sports app for additional streams.
  1. Want free, minimal setup: use an over‑the‑air antenna to pick up your local NBC station for marquee events and nightly shows.

Sample channel/streaming table

Region (example) Main TV channels Streaming platforms
United States NBC, USA Network, CNBC (plus other NBCU channels) Peacock, NBCOlympics.com, NBC.com, NBC Sports / NBC apps (with TV login)
United Kingdom BBC One, BBC Two (plus partner channels) BBC iPlayer, Discovery+ for extended coverage
Canada CBC and partner channels CBC Gem and related streaming services
Australia Nine Network 9Now streaming platform
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Official and mobile options

  • The Olympics’ own app and digital platforms offer personalized feeds, highlights, news, and links to official broadcasts in your region, so they’re a helpful “hub” when you’re traveling or unsure which local channel carries the Games.
  • Many broadcasters’ apps let you follow specific sports or athletes, receive notifications before an event starts, and watch condensed highlight packages if you miss the live airing.

A quick example scenario

Imagine you’re at home and want to follow figure skating, hockey, and freestyle skiing without constantly scrolling TV listings. You could subscribe to a national streaming platform that carries every event (like Peacock in the U.S.), favorite those sports in the app, and then jump between live feeds, replays, and daily highlight shows whenever you have time, instead of trying to catch everything live on traditional TV.

TL;DR:
Use your country’s official Olympic broadcaster (NBCU, BBC, CBC, Nine, etc.) on TV plus its streaming app, or subscribe to its main streaming service (such as Peacock in the U.S.) for comprehensive coverage, and check the official Olympics site/app for region‑specific “where to watch” links.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.