You have several options to watch the Detroit Tigers in 2026, depending on whether you’re in-market (Michigan/Great Lakes) or out-of-market, and whether you prefer cable, streaming, or radio.

Quick Scoop

  • The Tigers’ local TV rights have shifted away from their old regional sports network setup for 2026.
  • Games are moving under an MLB Media–run package, with a new Detroit-focused channel plus a direct-to-consumer streaming option.
  • National broadcasts (FOX, FS1, ESPN, TBS, Peacock, etc.) still carry select games across the U.S.

1. Core ways to watch in 2026

A. In-market TV (Michigan / Detroit region)

For fans in the Tigers’ home territory:

  • A new Detroit-centric channel, replacing the old FanDuel Sports Network Detroit-type feed, will carry most regular-season games.
  • This channel is expected to be available on major cable and satellite providers across Michigan and parts of the Great Lakes region.
  • Pricing and final channel number vary by provider, but the idea is a single, dedicated Tigers/Detroit SportsNet–style feed.

In practice, that means:

  1. Call or check your local cable/satellite provider’s sports packages around Opening Day 2026.
  1. Ask specifically about the new Tigers/Detroit sports channel (often branded along the lines of Detroit SportsNet or an MLB Media–run channel).
  1. Make sure you’re subscribed to a tier that includes regional sports.

B. Direct-to-consumer streaming (Tigers-specific)

Starting in 2026, Ilitch Sports & Entertainment and MLB Media are rolling out a streaming subscription so you can watch Tigers games without traditional cable.

Key points:

  • The plan is a single subscription that covers the full Tigers season for in-market fans.
  • It will be app-based (MLB-run), with details on app name, log-in, and pricing still being finalized.
  • You’ll be able to stream on smart TVs, phones, tablets, and streaming boxes once the app and subscription go live.

What to do:

  1. Closer to the regular season, check MLB.com/Tigers and the MLB app for announcements about an in-market Tigers streaming package.
  1. Expect to sign up through MLB/MLB Media rather than your cable company.

2. National TV games

The 2026 schedule already shows several Tigers games picked up for national coverage.

Typical national outlets:

  • FOX / FS1 (Saturday showcase, some prime-time games).
  • ESPN (Sunday or weekday prime-time).
  • TBS (Tuesday night games).
  • MLB Network (select early-season and special games).
  • Peacock or other streaming partners for a few Sunday games.

Example: early-season games already slotted include FOX, FS1, TBS, and Peacock windows in March–April, plus later-season showcase games like Tigers at Astros or Yankees.

How to watch these:

  • Any national cable/satellite bundle that includes these channels will work.
  • Live TV streaming services (YouTube TV, Hulu + Live TV, Fubo, etc.) typically carry FOX/FS1/ESPN/TBS/MLB Network, though lineups vary by region.

3. Out-of-market fans (outside Tigers territory)

If you live outside the Tigers’ home territory (for example, another state or abroad), your main option is MLB’s out-of-market package.

  • MLB.TV (or its 2026 equivalent) gives you live, out-of-market games; blackout rules still apply, so if you’re outside the Detroit territory you can usually watch every Tigers game.
  • In-market games are still blacked out on MLB.TV, so this is best for fans far from Michigan.

Steps:

  1. Subscribe to MLB’s out-of-market streaming package before or during the season.
  1. Select the Tigers as your favorite team to get quick access to their broadcasts.

4. Checking game-by-game TV info

Schedules now list both time and TV channel for each game.

Reliable places to check:

  • ESPN’s 2026 Detroit Tigers schedule page shows the opponent, time, and national TV info (like “MLB Net” or blank if only local).
  • TV-focused sites (like CableTV.com) list day, first pitch time, and which channel/streaming service carries each game (e.g., Detroit SportsNet, TBS, Tigers.TV).
  • Local Detroit outlets (like the Free Press) provide the full 2026 schedule and recap the platform shift to MLB Media.

If you’re planning your month:

  • Look up a calendar-style schedule and note which games are on FOX/FS1/TBS/ESPN versus the local Detroit channel or streaming app.

5. Radio and audio options

If you can’t watch video, you can still follow every pitch:

  • Detroit’s flagship sports radio station continues to carry Tigers games, simulcast across much of Michigan.
  • MLB’s audio subscription also offers home and away radio calls for each game.

This is handy for:

  • Driving, working, or traveling where video streaming isn’t practical.

6. Cost expectations (high level)

Exact prices for the new 2026 Tigers streaming package are still being finalized, but public comments emphasize:

  • A single-season subscription covering all local Tigers games for in-market fans.
  • Continued availability through cable/satellite, so you won’t be forced to cut the cord.

Cable bundles may cost more overall but also include other sports channels and entertainment; the direct-to-consumer app should be cheaper but focused almost entirely on Tigers (and possibly Red Wings later).

7. Quick checklist: how to watch Detroit Tigers 2026

  1. If you live in Michigan or nearby
    • Make sure your TV package includes the new Detroit Tigers/Detroit SportsNet–style channel.
 * Or subscribe to MLB’s new in-market Tigers streaming product once it’s officially launched.
  1. If you live outside the Tigers’ TV territory
    • Subscribe to MLB’s out-of-market package (MLB.TV or equivalent) and watch almost every Tigers game live.
  1. For big national games
    • Use FOX, FS1, ESPN, TBS, MLB Network, or Peacock via either cable/satellite or a live TV streaming service.
  1. For audio only
    • Turn on Detroit’s flagship sports radio or use MLB’s audio subscription.

Mini forum-style perspective

“If you’re out of state, MLB.TV is still the easiest way to catch the Tigers, as long as you’re outside the blackout zone. In-market folks will want that new MLB Media app or a cable package with the local Detroit channel.”

TL;DR: To watch Detroit Tigers games in 2026, you’ll use a mix of a new MLB Media–run local channel and streaming subscription in the Detroit market, MLB.TV out of market, and national TV windows on FOX/FS1/ESPN/TBS/MLB Network/Peacock for select games.

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