Anthem Sports & Entertainment, parent company of TNA Wrestling, is expanding the squared circle’s content across Mexico and Latin America. As part of a new multi-year agreement with Claro Sports, beginning January 1, 2026, TNA programming, including weekly flagship TNA IMPACT!, monthly Pay-Per-View events, and original TNA+ specials on will be made available on Claro’s pay-TV, OTT, and digital platforms across 17 territories.
Under the agreement, Claro will distribute TNA content across its full ecosystem — the ClaroSports pay TV channel, ClaroVideo OTT, ClaroSports.com, the ClaroSports YouTube channel, the ClaroSports mobile app, and FAST channel placements on Samsung, Roku, LG and Android TV platforms. That means fans across Argentina, Mexico, Colombia, Chile, and more will have multiple ways to watch TNA’s library and new programming starting in early 2026.
“Claro Sports is a major force in the digital and linear broadcasting landscape, with an extensive and loyal audience throughout Mexico and Latin America,” said Carlos Silva, President of Anthem Sports Group. “This has already been such an incredible year for TNA, with exponential growth reaching millions of fans all around the world. Claro Sports has been a key contributor to that success, and we are proud to build upon our landmark partnership with them as we continue to provide their viewers with even more high-quality professional wrestling content for years to come.”
For TNA, this carriage deal is proof that the company’s momentum is translating into wider international reach. Anthem highlighted TNA’s record attendance, streaming growth, and social traction in announcing the deal. Claro executives pointed to strong audience enthusiasm for wrestling in the region. For viewers, the agreement brings easier weekly shows, PPV events and exclusive TNA+ content without patchwork streaming workarounds.
“Our audience features some of the most passionate and knowledgeable wrestling fans in the world, and their response to TNA Wrestling has been incredibly enthusiastic,” said José Antonio Aboumrad, Claro Sports CEO. “The decision to build upon this partnership was an easy one, and we are pleased to continue working with TNA. They have some exciting things in store for the years ahead, and our viewers will get to experience every action-packed minute of it.”
The expanding distribution comes amid a broader streaming strategy for TNA. The promotion relaunched its direct-to-consumer service, TNA+, with Endeavor Streaming powering the platform back in 2023. That service has evolved since launch and added a free tier this year to widen the funnel of casual viewers into paid offerings. Combined with the streaming-first approach, the Claro deal is a smart complement, giving direct subscribers exclusive app perks while broadcast/OTT partners extend reach.
As the digital shift continues, TNA isn’t the only wrestling brand exploiting new streaming channels and FAST/OTT distribution. The NWA landed a spot on Roku’s sports lineup, demonstrating how smaller promotions can grow viewership with free, platform-level placements. Meanwhile, big media pairings — like WWE’s high-profile Netflix collaboration — have proven valuable for platforms, helping reduce churn and encourage habitual viewing.
Look for Claro to roll out a programming schedule as the January 1 start date approaches and for TNA to continue leveraging both TNA+ and third-party deals to grow its footprint. For Latin American viewers this will likely mean a mix of live and archived IMPACT episodes, PPV windows, and TNA+ special programming on multiple devices — from cable boxes to free FAST channels on smart TVs.
By expanding its reach with a multi-platform like Claro, TNA has climbed another rung on the ladder toward becoming a truly global wrestling contender.

