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WWE Is Moving to ESPN

Budget Seniors, June 17, 2026June 17, 2026
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WWE Streaming Move Β· Where Each Show Lives Now & What It Costs

WWE’s biggest live events have left Peacock for ESPN’s streaming app, and the change already happened faster than most fans expected. This guide breaks down exactly which WWE shows moved, which ones didn’t, what plan you need, the full event schedule, and the most-searched questions fans have about the switch.

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The move happened earlier than originally announced β€” WWE’s premium events began airing on ESPN’s app starting with a brand-new show called Wrestlepalooza, well ahead of the previously stated start date. If you were waiting for an official “2026 switch,” it already took place β€” check below for what’s airing next.

πŸ”” The Short Version of What Happened

ESPN and WWE signed a five-year rights agreement making ESPN’s streaming platforms the exclusive U.S. home for every WWE Premium Live Event β€” the shows formerly known as pay-per-views, including WrestleMania, Royal Rumble, SummerSlam, Survivor Series, and Money in the Bank. The agreement was originally set to begin in 2026, but both companies moved the timeline up, and the partnership actually kicked off with a new event months earlier than planned. This ended Peacock’s run as the home of WWE’s premium events, a run that had lasted since 2021. It’s a separate deal from WWE Raw’s move to Netflix and SmackDown’s continued home on USA Network β€” three different streaming changes that often get confused with each other.

βœ… Key Takeaways β€” The Short Version

Here’s what matters most if you only have a minute before the details below.

πŸ“…The move already happened β€” premium events started airing on ESPN’s app earlier than the original 2026 target date, beginning with a one-off event called Wrestlepalooza.
🎟️You need the Unlimited plan, not Select β€” WWE’s premium events are not included in ESPN’s cheaper $11.99 to $12.99 tier.
πŸ’°ESPN Unlimited costs $29.99 a month ($299.99 a year), a noticeably higher price than the roughly $10 a month Peacock charged for the same events.
πŸ“ΊRaw, SmackDown, and NXT did not move to ESPN β€” those weekly shows stay on Netflix, USA Network, and The CW respectively.
🏟️WrestleMania, SummerSlam, Royal Rumble, and Survivor Series are among the marquee events now exclusive to ESPN.
🎬Saturday Night’s Main Event stays on Peacock, separate from the main premium event package that moved.
πŸ“¦Some pay-TV and streaming bundles already include ESPN Unlimited at no extra charge, which can offset the higher price.
πŸ”Replays are available on demand shortly after each live event ends, for anyone with an Unlimited subscription.
πŸ“… WWE Premium Live Event Schedule on ESPN

Below is the lineup of major WWE events now airing exclusively through ESPN’s streaming service. Dates and locations are subject to change, so it’s worth confirming the exact date close to the event.

Event Date Location
Royal Rumble Late January Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Elimination Chamber Late February Chicago, Illinois
WrestleMania Marquee Event Mid-April (two nights) Las Vegas, Nevada
SummerSlam Early August (two nights) Minneapolis, Minnesota
Money in the Bank Early September New Orleans, Louisiana
Survivor Series Late November Varies by year
⚠️ Always Confirm the Exact Date Before You Plan Around It

WWE and ESPN occasionally adjust event dates and locations months in advance. Check the official WWE or ESPN schedule page closer to the date to confirm start time and any changes, especially for international events that may air at unusual hours for U.S. time zones.

πŸ“ Where Each WWE Show Actually Lives Now
🏟️ Premium Live Events
ESPN Unlimited
WrestleMania, Royal Rumble, SummerSlam, Survivor Series, Money in the Bank, and more β€” moved from Peacock
πŸŽ™οΈ Monday Night Raw
Netflix
Weekly flagship show, streaming live every Monday night β€” unaffected by the ESPN move
πŸ“Ί SmackDown
USA Network
Weekly Friday night show stays on traditional cable television, not a streaming-only service
🌱 NXT
The CW
Weekly developmental brand show airs Tuesday nights on broadcast TV, separate from the ESPN deal
🎬 What About NXT’s Big Events and Saturday Night’s Main Event?

NXT’s own premium events and the recurring Saturday Night’s Main Event specials stayed with Peacock rather than moving to ESPN β€” only the main roster’s marquee premium events made the switch. That means a serious WWE fan who wants every show may still end up juggling more than one subscription rather than consolidating everything onto a single service.

πŸ“‹ Common Questions β€” Answered in Detail

These are the specific questions fans have been searching since the move was announced and then happened earlier than expected.

  • 1
    Is WWE on ESPN Select or ESPN Unlimited? Unlimited only Β· Select subscribers must upgrade to access WWE premium events
    WWE’s premium live events stream exclusively through the Unlimited plan β€” they are not included in the cheaper Select tier at all, whether you subscribe on your own or as part of a bundle. If you’re currently on Select and try to watch a premium event, you’ll be prompted to upgrade rather than being able to purchase the event separately the way pay-per-views used to work. This is a meaningful change for budget-conscious fans, since the Select plan at roughly $12 a month covers a wide range of other ESPN programming, but it does not unlock WWE’s biggest shows no matter how long you’ve been a subscriber.
  • 2
    When exactly did WWE start airing on ESPN? Started earlier than planned, with a new one-off event kicking off the partnership ahead of the original 2026 target date
    The original announcement framed 2026 as the start date, but both companies later confirmed the timeline moved up significantly, with the partnership launching alongside ESPN’s new direct-to-consumer app rather than waiting for the new year. The very first event under the new deal was a brand-new show created specifically to mark the occasion, rather than a previously scheduled premium event. If you’ve been searching for “when is WWE going to ESPN” expecting a future date, the honest answer is that the transition is already complete β€” WWE’s premium events have been airing there for months by this point, and the original “starting in 2026” framing mostly refers to when the deal was initially expected to begin before it was accelerated.
  • 3
    Is WWE leaving Peacock completely? No β€” only premium live events left Β· Saturday Night’s Main Event and NXT’s premium events remain on Peacock
    It’s a partial departure rather than a full exit. Peacock’s exclusivity over WWE’s main roster premium events β€” the shows people commonly still call pay-per-views β€” has ended, with ESPN not buying out any of Peacock’s remaining contractual obligations during the transition. However, Peacock retained the rights to the recurring Saturday Night’s Main Event specials, and NXT’s own premium live events stayed there as well, at least through the most recently confirmed scheduling. This means Peacock didn’t lose WWE programming entirely, which is part of why fans sometimes get conflicting information about whether WWE “left” Peacock β€” the answer is mostly yes for the biggest shows, but not entirely.
  • 4
    How much more expensive is watching WWE now compared to Peacock? Roughly triple the monthly cost for the same premium events Β· Peacock charged around $10/month versus ESPN Unlimited’s $29.99/month
    This is the single biggest complaint from longtime fans, and the math backs it up. Peacock’s standard plan had been priced in the roughly $8 to $11 per month range for years, and that subscription unlocked WWE’s premium events alongside a large library of other Peacock content. ESPN Unlimited costs $29.99 per month, or $299.99 billed annually, which is a substantial jump for fans whose primary or only reason for subscribing is WWE programming. The silver lining is that the Unlimited plan also includes NFL, NBA, NHL, MLB, college football, and a long list of other live sports content well beyond wrestling, so the value comparison depends heavily on whether you’d watch any of that other programming or if WWE is genuinely the only thing you’re paying for.
  • 5
    Can I get WWE on ESPN without paying $29.99 a month directly? Yes, in some cases β€” several pay-TV and live-streaming bundles already include ESPN Unlimited at no extra charge
    Several existing pay-TV and live-streaming bundle subscribers already have access to what’s called ESPN Unlimited as part of their existing package, without paying ESPN separately. This has applied to certain subscribers of services that bundle live sports channels into a broader TV package, though exactly which providers participate has continued to expand and shift since launch, and some major providers were initially left out of those arrangements. The most reliable way to check is to open the ESPN app, look for an option to activate or sign in through your TV or internet provider, and see whether your specific plan qualifies β€” this avoids paying for a second, redundant subscription on top of a bundle you may already be paying for.
  • 6
    Why did WWE’s shows get split across so many different services? Each WWE property β€” Raw, SmackDown, NXT, and premium events β€” was negotiated as a separate media rights deal with a different buyer
    The fragmentation isn’t an accident β€” it reflects how WWE has approached media rights negotiations in recent years, treating each show as its own separate package that can be sold to the highest bidder rather than bundling everything with one partner the way the old WWE Network once did. Raw’s move to Netflix, SmackDown’s continued home on USA Network, NXT’s placement on The CW, and the premium events’ move to ESPN were each negotiated independently, on different timelines, with different companies. For fans, the practical effect is that following WWE comprehensively now requires juggling potentially three or four different subscriptions or TV packages instead of the single $9.99-a-month WWE Network that used to cover everything in one place.
  • 7
    Will I be able to watch replays of WWE events after they air live? Yes β€” on-demand replays are available shortly after each event ends, for ESPN Unlimited subscribers
    If you miss a live event or simply prefer to watch later, WWE premium events on ESPN are made available for on-demand replay shortly after the live broadcast concludes, accessible to anyone with an active ESPN Unlimited subscription, whether that subscription is standalone or part of a bundle. This works similarly to how other live sports replays function within the ESPN app, so there’s no need to catch every show in real time to eventually watch the full event. Keep in mind this replay access requires an active Unlimited subscription at the time you watch β€” letting your subscription lapse will also remove access to the on-demand replay library, not just future live events.
  • 8
    Is there a way to watch just one event without a full monthly subscription? No standalone pay-per-event purchase option currently exists Β· A full Unlimited subscription is required even for a single event
    Unlike the traditional pay-per-view model where fans could pay a one-time fee for a single event, ESPN’s structure requires an active Unlimited subscription to watch any premium live event β€” there is no option to buy access to just WrestleMania or just Royal Rumble individually. The most cost-effective workaround for fans who only care about one or two events a year is to subscribe for a single month around the event you want to watch, then cancel before the next billing cycle, since ESPN’s plans bill month to month with no long-term contract and no early termination fee. Just be mindful of exactly when your billing date falls so you cancel before being charged for a second month you don’t need.
πŸ” What Should You Actually Do About This?
I only watch WWE for the big events like WrestleMania β€” is it worth subscribing?
CASUAL FANS
For fans who mainly tune in for two or three marquee shows a year, a short-term monthly subscription is the most sensible approach. Rather than paying $29.99 every month for events spread across the calendar, subscribe the month of an event you care about β€” say, the month WrestleMania airs β€” watch it live or via the on-demand replay, and cancel before your next billing date if you don’t plan to use it again soon. Because there’s no contract and no early termination fee, this approach costs roughly $30 per event you actually want rather than locking you into year-round billing for shows you’d otherwise skip. Just set a clear reminder to cancel, since ESPN typically does not send a notification before a subscription renews.
🎯 Subscribe the month of the event, then cancel 🚫 No pay-per-event option β€” full Unlimited required πŸ“… Set a reminder before your next billing date πŸ” Replays stay available as long as the subscription is active
I follow WWE year-round, including Raw and SmackDown β€” what’s the full setup I need?
DEDICATED FANS
Comprehensive WWE coverage now genuinely requires multiple subscriptions, and it helps to know that going in rather than being surprised by it. Monday Night Raw requires a Netflix subscription, with plans starting at a modest monthly rate. SmackDown remains on USA Network, which means either a traditional cable or satellite package, or a live-TV streaming service that carries USA Network as one of its channels. NXT airs on The CW, which is available free with an antenna in most markets or through various streaming bundles. Premium live events require ESPN Unlimited specifically. Adding up the cheapest version of all four β€” basic Netflix, a live-TV streaming bundle that includes USA Network, free over-the-air CW access, and ESPN Unlimited β€” puts dedicated fans in the range of roughly $60 to $90 a month depending on which specific services and plans are chosen, a noticeable increase from the single subscription that used to cover everything.
πŸŽ™οΈ Raw: Netflix subscription required πŸ“Ί SmackDown: cable, satellite, or live-TV streaming with USA Network 🌱 NXT: The CW, often free with an antenna 🏟️ Premium events: ESPN Unlimited specifically
I already pay for cable or a live-TV bundle β€” do I need to pay ESPN separately?
EXISTING TV SUBSCRIBERS
Possibly not β€” check your current package before adding a new charge. A number of pay-TV and live-streaming bundle providers already include access to ESPN Unlimited as part of their existing packages, letting subscribers activate it through the ESPN app using their TV provider login rather than paying ESPN directly a second time. Which specific providers are included has continued to change since the deal launched, with some major providers notably left out at first while others were added on. The safest way to find out is to open the ESPN app, look for a sign-in option through your TV or internet provider, and attempt to authenticate β€” if it works, you likely already have access at no additional monthly cost.
πŸ”— Try signing in via your TV provider in the ESPN app first πŸ“‹ Provider list has changed since launch β€” recheck periodically πŸ’° Avoid paying twice for the same access πŸ“± No extra hardware needed β€” it’s app-based activation
Why does this feel confusing compared to the old WWE Network days?
CONTEXT & BACKGROUND
It’s a fair reaction β€” WWE’s streaming setup genuinely became more complicated over the past several years, not less. The original WWE Network, launched in 2014, charged a flat monthly fee for every live event plus a deep on-demand library, all in one place. That model ended when WWE shifted to a strategy of selling each type of programming separately to different media companies, chasing the highest bid for each piece rather than keeping everything bundled. The result is more total revenue for WWE and its parent company, but a more fragmented experience for fans who now have to track which show lives where and budget for multiple subscriptions instead of one. Expect this kind of negotiation to continue periodically, since most of these deals are multi-year agreements rather than permanent arrangements, meaning further changes are realistically possible down the line.
πŸ“œ WWE Network model ended; rights now sold separately πŸ’΅ Higher total cost spread across more subscriptions πŸ”„ Deals are multi-year, not permanent β€” expect future changes 🧾 Budget for several services if you want full coverage
How do I actually watch WWE on ESPN once I’m subscribed?
GETTING STARTED Β· SETUP HELP
Setup is entirely app-based with no equipment to buy or install. Download the free ESPN app on a phone, tablet, smart TV, or streaming device like Roku or Fire TV. Sign in or create an account, then subscribe to the Unlimited plan directly, or authenticate through your TV provider if your existing package already includes it. On the night of an event, open the app, navigate to the live event listing, and stream it the same way you would any other live sporting event in the app β€” no separate purchase or unlock code is needed beyond having an active Unlimited subscription. If you’d rather watch on a regular television without a smart TV built in, a basic streaming stick plugged into any HDMI port accomplishes the same thing for a modest one-time cost.
πŸ“± Free app download β€” no equipment purchase required πŸ“Ί Works on smart TVs and basic streaming sticks alike πŸ” Sign in once; no separate event unlock needed πŸ†˜ Streaming sticks are an affordable option for older TVs
πŸ“ Find Local Help & Compare Providers

Use the buttons below to find streaming device retailers, compare TV and internet providers near you, or locate tech setup help. Always confirm current pricing and event schedules on the official ESPN and WWE sites before subscribing.

Searching near you…
πŸ”‘ Quick Reference β€” Key Links & Contacts
🌐 ESPN plans & sign-up: plus.espn.com 🀼 WWE event schedule: wwe.com πŸ“± ESPN app: App Store / Google Play (search “ESPN”) πŸ’¬ ESPN account support: support.espn.com πŸŽ™οΈ Raw on Netflix: netflix.com πŸ“Ί SmackDown on USA Network: usanetwork.com 🌱 NXT on The CW: cwtv.com ⏸️ Manage or cancel: ESPN app β†’ Profile β†’ Account β†’ Subscriptions
βœ… Quick Checklist Before the Next Big Event
  • Step 1: Confirm whether the event you want to watch is a premium live event (needs ESPN Unlimited) or a weekly show (Raw, SmackDown, or NXT β€” different services).
  • Step 2: Check if your existing cable, satellite, or live-TV streaming bundle already includes ESPN Unlimited before paying separately.
  • Step 3: If subscribing just for one event, mark your calendar to cancel before the next billing date to avoid an unwanted renewal charge.
  • Step 4: Download the free ESPN app ahead of time and test your sign-in so you’re not troubleshooting minutes before the show starts.
  • Step 5: Double-check the event’s start time in your own time zone, especially for events held overseas.

WWE and ESPN’s streaming arrangements, pricing, and event schedules are set by ESPN, WWE, and their respective parent companies and may change at any time. Figures and dates shown in this guide reflect commonly reported current arrangements and may not match every account, region, or future schedule update. Always confirm current pricing and event details on the official ESPN and WWE sites before subscribing or making plans. This page is independently written and has no affiliation with ESPN, Disney, WWE, TKO Group, Netflix, NBCUniversal, or Peacock.

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