The biggest streaming story of the 2026 FIFA World Cup isn’t happening on FOX One, Peacock, or another major broadcaster. It’s happening on YouTube.
Brazilian creator Casimiro Miguel’s CazéTV has become one of the tournament’s breakout success stories after securing the rights to stream all 104 World Cup matches in Brazil for free. During Brazil’s opening match, the channel reportedly peaked at 12.4 million concurrent viewers, which was the largest live audience in YouTube history and the first time a streamer-led channel topped 10 million live viewers.
Now, fans around the world are taking notice after searches for CazéTV have surged by roughly 900%. The increase shows how viewers are looking for a free way to watch the World Cup instead of paying for another streaming subscription. While the broadcasts are only licensed for Brazil, the sudden spike in global interest highlights just how many sports fans are searching for cheaper ways to watch the world’s biggest sporting event.
Fans outside the country are running into geographic restrictions unless they use a VPN. According to Yegor Sak, founder of VPN provider Windscribe, CazéTV is proving something broadcasters have ignored for years.
“One channel on YouTube is out-broadcasting the official rights holders, in 4K, for free, and pulling the biggest live audience the platform has ever seen. The paid broadcasters should find that alarming,” Yak said.
The popularity of CazéTV also comes as fans are growing increasingly frustrated with the rising cost of watching live sports.
A survey ahead of the World Cup found that nearly half of Americans plan to subscribe to a streaming service specifically for the tournament. The survey also revealed that more than one in five expect to cancel once the tournament ends. It isn’t just soccer leaving sports fans frustrated about paywalls. Another recent survey found that 93% of NFL fans believe watching football has become too expensive, underscoring growing discomfort with the number of subscriptions required to follow major sports throughout the year.
The consumer trends suggest the World Cup is becoming a turning point for sports streaming. Fans aren’t abandoning live sports; they’re embracing them. But they’re also making it clear they want fewer paywalls, fewer subscriptions, and more flexibility in how they watch.
That’s what makes CazéTV’s success so significant. It isn’t an illegal stream or a pirate website. It’s a fully licensed broadcaster offering free, high-quality coverage on one of the world’s most popular video platforms.
“People aren’t trying to do anything wrong, they’re looking for value,” Sak said. “When a free, legal, high-quality stream exists and your local broadcaster wants money on top of a subscription you already pay for, the choice makes itself.”
As leagues and broadcasters continue pushing more games behind streaming subscriptions, CazéTV may offer a glimpse of what many sports fans wish the future looked like.

