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Is YouTube TV Getting ABC and ESPN Back?

Budget Seniors, June 19, 2026June 19, 2026
πŸ“Ίβœ…β“
YouTube TV Β· ESPN Β· ABC Β· Current Status Β· New Plans Β· What to Do Next

ESPN and ABC returned to YouTube TV in November 2025 after a 15-day blackout. They’re back now and available on current plans. But the bigger changes β€” new skinny-bundle plans and ESPN Unlimited integration β€” are still rolling out in 2026. This guide explains exactly where things stand and what to expect next.

βœ… ESPN & ABC on YouTube TV Back since November 17, 2025 β€” fully restored, currently live
⏳ ESPN Unlimited Integration Coming this fall β€” confirmed but not yet fully rolled out
🚨
What’s Happening Right Now

ESPN and ABC are fully live on YouTube TV β€” the dispute is over. But two things are still in progress. First, ESPN Unlimited integration into YouTube TV is confirmed for fall 2026, timed to coincide with the NFL season. No exact date has been announced yet. Second, YouTube TV has launched new cheaper genre-specific plans in 2026 β€” including a Sports Plan at $64.99/month that includes ESPN, ABC, CBS, FOX, NBC, FS1, NFL Network, and NBA TV. The Sports Plan will also get ESPN Unlimited added at no extra cost when the fall rollout happens. The main YouTube TV plan still runs $82.99/month with 100+ channels.

πŸ“‘ The Full Story β€” What Happened and Where Things Stand

On October 30, 2025, Disney pulled all of its channels β€” including ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, ESPNEWS, SEC Network, ACC Network, ABC, FX, FXX, National Geographic, Freeform, and Disney Channel β€” from YouTube TV’s live lineup when their previous carriage contract expired without a new agreement. The timing was particularly painful for sports fans: it knocked out two weekends of college football, the opening week of college basketball, early NBA games, and two Monday Night Football broadcasts. YouTube TV issued all affected subscribers a one-time $20 credit. After 15 days of public standoff, Disney and Google announced a new multi-year deal on November 17, 2025. Channels were restored by the end of that day. The new contract also locked in something forward-looking: ESPN Unlimited β€” Disney’s full direct-to-consumer ESPN streaming product β€” will be added to YouTube TV at no additional cost for base plan subscribers by the end of 2026, with the specific rollout targeted for fall 2026 at the start of the NFL season. As of mid-2026, that integration is not yet live, but it is confirmed and publicly committed.

πŸ’° YouTube TV Plans Right Now β€” What Each Includes

YouTube TV launched new genre-specific plans in early 2026, giving subscribers cheaper options alongside the full main plan. All plans that include ESPN will receive ESPN Unlimited integration when the fall rollout completes.

Plan Monthly Price ESPN & ABC? ESPN Unlimited? Key Channels
Sports Plan Best for Sports Fans $64.99/mo$54.99 new subscribers (first yr) Both included Coming fall 2026 ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, ESPNEWS, ABC, CBS, FOX, NBC, FS1, FS2, NFL Network, NBA TV, Golf Channel, SEC Network
Sports + News Plan $71.99/mo$56.99 new subscribers (first yr) Both included Coming fall 2026 Everything in Sports Plan plus CNN, Fox News, MSNBC, CNBC, Bloomberg, C-SPAN, Fox Business
Entertainment Plan $54.99/mo$44.99 new subscribers (first yr) No ESPN Β· ABC only No ABC, NBC, CBS, FOX, Bravo, E!, TLC, HGTV, Food Network, lifetime, Hallmark Β· No ESPN or sports cable networks
News + Entertainment + Family Plan $69.99/mo$59.99 new subscribers (first yr) No ESPN Β· ABC only No ABC, NBC, CBS, FOX, CNN, Fox News, Disney Channel, Nickelodeon, Cartoon Network, National Geographic, PBS Kids
Main YouTube TV Plan Most Complete $82.99/mo100+ channels Β· most comprehensive Both included Coming fall 2026 Everything above plus CNN, A&E, TLC, Bravo, AMC, Comedy Central, Disney Channel, Nickelodeon, and more β€” broadest channel selection available
πŸ’‘ Which Plan Makes Sense for Sports Fans

If ESPN and live sports are your reason for having YouTube TV, the Sports Plan at $64.99/month saves $18/month compared to the main plan without giving up any sports channels. It also gets ESPN Unlimited added in fall 2026 at no extra cost. The Entertainment Plan ($54.99/month) does NOT include ESPN β€” only local ABC from the broadcast side. If you only want ABC for local news and don’t care about ESPN, that plan works. But if you’re a sports household, it’s the wrong plan.

πŸ”‘ Everything You’re Asking About β€” Answered

The questions below are what YouTube TV subscribers searched most during and after the ESPN/ABC dispute β€” and what many are still asking as new plans roll out. Straightforward answers, no hedging.

  • 1
    Are ABC and ESPN back on YouTube TV? Yes β€” both returned November 17, 2025 Β· The dispute lasted 15 days Β· All Disney-owned channels (ESPN, ABC, FX, SEC Network, Nat Geo, etc.) were fully restored Β· No additional steps needed by subscribers
    The blackout is over. Disney and Google reached a new multi-year carriage agreement and announced it on November 17, 2025. By the end of that same day, ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, ESPNEWS, SEC Network, ACC Network, ABC, FX, FXX, National Geographic, Freeform, Disney Channel, and all other Disney-owned channels were live again on YouTube TV for all subscribers. You don’t need to do anything on your end β€” the channels returned automatically to the same channel numbers where they appeared before the dispute. If you canceled your YouTube TV subscription during the blackout and want to come back, you can rejoin at tv.youtube.com. Note that YouTube TV issued all affected subscribers a one-time $20 credit during the dispute. If you stayed subscribed through the blackout and haven’t seen that credit applied to your account, log in and check your billing history β€” it should appear as a one-time adjustment.
  • 2
    Will ESPN ever go back to YouTube TV permanently β€” is this deal long-term? Yes β€” the new agreement is multi-year Β· ESPN and ABC are secured on YouTube TV for multiple years Β· The deal also includes ESPN Unlimited integration by end of 2026 Β· Carriage disputes can always resurface when contracts expire β€” this one is settled for now
    The November 2025 deal between Disney and Google is a multi-year agreement, which means ESPN and ABC are secured on YouTube TV through multiple future renewals before another contract expiration could trigger a similar standoff. The specific financial terms were not made public, but both companies confirmed it as a multi-year arrangement that also includes forward-looking provisions: ESPN Unlimited joining YouTube TV at no extra cost, and the option for YouTube TV to include Disney+ and Hulu bundles in select future YouTube TV offerings. This is meaningfully different from the previous deal, which expired without a renewal in place and led to the abrupt blackout. Whether Disney and Google eventually clash again at the next renewal is unknowable β€” these disputes between programmers and distributors have become routine in the streaming industry β€” but the current contract provides several years of stability. During that time, ESPN and ABC will be part of every YouTube TV plan that includes them today.
  • 3
    I have ESPN but not ABC on YouTube TV. Why? ABC is a local broadcast channel on YouTube TV and only available in markets where YouTube TV carries your local ABC affiliate Β· If ABC isn’t in your lineup, it’s a market coverage gap β€” not a dispute issue Β· Check tv.youtube.com with your zip code to see if ABC is available in your area
    This is a different issue from the Disney dispute. Even under normal circumstances, ABC on YouTube TV is your local ABC affiliate β€” meaning YouTube TV airs your city’s ABC station, not a national ABC feed. If your specific market’s ABC affiliate isn’t part of YouTube TV’s local channel lineup for your zip code, ABC simply won’t appear in your guide. YouTube TV’s local channel coverage is very strong β€” over 98% of U.S. television households have access to at least one of the major broadcast networks through YouTube TV β€” but gaps exist in some smaller markets. To check: go to tv.youtube.com, enter your zip code, and look at the listed local channels for your area before or after subscribing. ABC’s local affiliate listings vary by market. If ABC is missing in your area specifically, alternatives include a free HD antenna plugged into your TV (the antenna picks up ABC’s broadcast signal for free in most U.S. homes) and connecting that antenna to your TV alongside using YouTube TV for cable channels. Many YouTube TV subscribers run both simultaneously β€” antenna for local broadcast and YouTube TV for cable and streaming content.
  • 4
    What is the YouTube TV ESPN dispute update β€” is there an ongoing fight? The 2025 dispute is fully resolved Β· No current dispute between YouTube TV and Disney/ESPN Β· The new multi-year deal is in effect Β· The previous standoff lasted October 30 – November 17, 2025 β€” 15 days total
    There is no active dispute. The October–November 2025 standoff between Disney and YouTube TV was the second such clash between the two companies β€” the first was a brief two-day blackout in December 2021, which was resolved quickly. The 2025 dispute was more damaging to subscribers because it lasted 15 days and hit during peak fall sports season. During the blackout, YouTube TV issued $20 credits to subscribers and made its own streaming alternatives available. The dispute ended because both sides had more to lose by staying apart than by reaching an agreement. Talks broke down and restarted multiple times over the two-week period, with Disney’s CFO publicly saying Disney was prepared to negotiate “as long as they want to.” The final agreement gave Disney the financial terms it sought while giving YouTube TV the flexibility to create new genre-specific plans and integrate ESPN Unlimited β€” something Google had been pushing for. Unless the current multi-year contract expires without a renewal, there is no indication of another dispute in the near term.
  • 5
    When is YouTube TV getting ESPN Unlimited β€” is it available yet? Not yet as of mid-2026 Β· Confirmed for fall 2026, targeted to coincide with the NFL season start Β· Will be included in the Sports Plan, Sports + News Plan, and main YouTube TV plan at no extra cost Β· No exact date announced
    ESPN Unlimited β€” Disney’s full direct-to-consumer ESPN streaming product that includes live ESPN channels, on-demand content, ESPN’s documentary library, and advanced features β€” is promised to YouTube TV subscribers but not yet live. Disney and Google confirmed the integration is coming this fall, timed to the start of the NFL regular season in September, with Super Bowl LXI (which airs on ESPN and ABC) scheduled for February 2027 as a landmark event for the platform. What ESPN Unlimited adds beyond what YouTube TV already carries: the ESPN streaming library (LaLiga soccer, PGA Tour golf, UFC, and on-demand ESPN+ content), enhanced features inside the ESPN app (alternate camera angles, fantasy sports tools, multiview), and a unified experience between the YouTube TV interface and ESPN’s own app. The technical integration β€” embedding a separate streaming product into YouTube TV’s interface β€” is what’s taking time. Based on published statements, the rollout is expected in time for NFL preseason in August or regular season in September. Until then, YouTube TV subscribers can watch ESPN and ABC live through YouTube TV’s existing channel lineup exactly as they could before the 2025 dispute.
  • 6
    How do I find ESPN on YouTube TV β€” I can’t find the channel? Search “ESPN” in the YouTube TV search bar Β· Or go to your Live guide and scroll to the sports section Β· ESPN is also accessible through the ESPN app if you log in with your YouTube TV credentials Β· If ESPN doesn’t appear at all, restart the YouTube TV app or check that you’re on a plan that includes it
    Finding ESPN on YouTube TV is straightforward on most devices, but it can be disorienting if you’ve recently switched plans or devices. The most direct method on any device: open YouTube TV and use the search function (magnifying glass icon) to search “ESPN.” The channel will appear in results and you can click directly into the live feed or browse the upcoming schedule. In the live guide (the channel grid), ESPN typically appears in the Sports category section β€” scroll left in the guide to reach channels organized by genre, or use the filter button to show only sports channels. On smart TVs and Roku or Fire TV devices, ESPN also has its own dedicated app β€” you can open the ESPN app separately, tap “Log In With TV Provider,” select YouTube TV, and sign in with your YouTube TV Google account. This gives you access to ESPN through the ESPN app interface, which some subscribers prefer for its sports-specific layout and added features. One common reason ESPN doesn’t appear: you’re on the Entertainment Plan, which does not include ESPN. If that’s your current plan and you want ESPN, you’d need to upgrade to the Sports Plan or the main YouTube TV plan through your account settings at tv.youtube.com.
  • 7
    Did ESPN and YouTube TV make an agreement β€” what did they actually agree to? Yes β€” a new multi-year deal confirmed November 17, 2025 Β· Key terms: all Disney channels restored immediately Β· ESPN Unlimited added to YouTube TV at no extra cost by end of 2026 Β· YouTube TV can include Disney+ and Hulu bundles in future offerings Β· YouTube TV issued $20 credits to subscribers for the disruption
    The November 2025 deal between Disney and Google covers several distinct things. The most immediate: all Disney-owned channels β€” ESPN, ABC, and roughly a dozen others β€” were restored to YouTube TV’s live lineup within hours of the announcement. The financial terms of the carriage agreement (how much YouTube TV pays Disney to carry the channels) were not disclosed, which is standard practice in these negotiations. Beyond the immediate restoration, the deal includes a forward-looking provision that is significant for YouTube TV subscribers: ESPN Unlimited, Disney’s full direct-to-consumer streaming product, will be integrated into YouTube TV’s base plan subscribers at no additional cost by the end of 2026. This was something YouTube TV had been unable to offer its subscribers since ESPN Unlimited launched in August 2025. The deal also gives YouTube TV the option to include Disney+ and Hulu streaming bundles as part of future YouTube TV offerings β€” something that could give Google new ways to package its service against competitors like Hulu + Live TV, which already bundles all three Disney streaming services. For subscribers, the most tangible near-term outcome is that ESPN and ABC are securely back, and ESPN Unlimited is coming without a price increase.
  • 8
    Is YouTube TV getting ABC back β€” what about my local ABC affiliate specifically? Yes β€” ABC was restored along with ESPN on November 17, 2025 Β· Your local ABC affiliate (not a national ABC channel) is what YouTube TV carries Β· Availability depends on your specific market Β· If ABC is still missing for you, check your zip code coverage at tv.youtube.com or try refreshing the YouTube TV app
    ABC returned to YouTube TV the same night ESPN did, as part of the same November 2025 Disney deal. If you’re on a plan that previously carried your local ABC affiliate and live in a market where YouTube TV has distribution rights for that station, ABC should be in your guide right now. If it’s not showing up, the first step is to close the YouTube TV app completely and reopen it β€” sometimes the channel lineup needs a refresh after major changes, and a simple restart resolves it on most devices. On a smart TV, you can also try: Go to your device’s settings, find the YouTube TV app, clear the cache, and reopen the app. If ABC still doesn’t appear after these steps, open a web browser, go to tv.youtube.com, sign in, and check whether ABC appears in the web interface. If it shows there but not on your TV app, the issue is an outdated app version β€” update your YouTube TV app through the device’s app store. If ABC doesn’t appear in the web interface either, your specific market may have a local affiliate coverage limitation rather than a dispute issue.
πŸ” Your Situation β€” What to Do Right Now
ESPN and ABC are still not showing up on my YouTube TV. How do I fix it?
CHANNELS MISSING Β· FIX IT
The dispute is resolved β€” if ESPN or ABC still isn’t showing up, it’s a technical issue on your device, not an ongoing blackout. Work through these steps in order. First, completely close the YouTube TV app on your TV or device β€” don’t just minimize it, fully quit it β€” then reopen it. This refreshes the channel lineup. Second, if the app restart doesn’t work, restart the device itself: unplug your Roku, Fire TV stick, or Apple TV from power, wait 30 seconds, and plug it back in. Third, check your plan: log in to tv.youtube.com from any web browser, go to your account settings, and confirm you’re on the Sports Plan, Sports + News Plan, or the main YouTube TV plan. If you switched to the Entertainment Plan or News + Entertainment + Family Plan, ESPN is not included in those tiers β€” you’d need to upgrade. Fourth, if the channels appear in the web browser but not on your TV app, your TV app needs an update. Go to the app store on your smart TV (or the Roku/Fire TV channel store) and update the YouTube TV app to the latest version. Fifth, if none of these work, contact YouTube TV support at tv.youtube.com/support and mention that Disney channels including ESPN and ABC are not appearing despite the dispute being resolved.
1️⃣ Restart YouTube TV app β€” fully close and reopen 2️⃣ Restart the device β€” unplug 30 seconds 3️⃣ Check your plan β€” Entertainment Plan does NOT include ESPN 4️⃣ Update the app β€” outdated version may not reflect restored channels
I canceled YouTube TV during the blackout. Should I come back β€” and which plan?
RETURNING SUBSCRIBERS
If you left during the blackout and want to return, ESPN and ABC are fully restored and the new plans give you more options than before. The decision comes down to what you watch. For sports households β€” NFL, NBA, college sports, ESPN β€” the Sports Plan at $64.99/month is the most practical choice: it costs $18/month less than the old base plan while keeping every sports channel you had before. It also gets ESPN Unlimited added at no extra cost this fall. For households who want everything β€” sports, news, entertainment, local TV β€” the main plan at $82.99/month remains available and includes 100+ channels. A note on returning: YouTube TV sometimes offers promotional pricing for returning subscribers. Check tv.youtube.com when you go to rejoin β€” deals sometimes appear for accounts that canceled. The three-day free trial is no longer available for returning subscribers who already used it, but promotional offers are periodic. Also worth checking: whether Hulu + Live TV ($89.99/month) might fit your household better, since it bundles Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN Unlimited in one package with a 3-day trial for new subscribers β€” useful if you’d also benefit from Disney+ or Hulu’s on-demand library.
🏈 Sports-focused: Sports Plan β€” $64.99/mo Β· saves $18/mo vs main plan πŸ“Ί Want everything: main plan β€” $82.99/mo Β· 100+ channels πŸ’° Returning deal: check tv.youtube.com β€” promo pricing sometimes available 🎬 Alternative: Hulu + Live TV ($89.99) bundles Disney+ + Hulu + ESPN Unlimited
I’m on YouTube TV and want ESPN Unlimited now β€” do I have to wait?
WANT ESPN UNLIMITED NOW
Yes, you’ll need to wait for the fall 2026 rollout if you want ESPN Unlimited embedded in YouTube TV β€” but you can get it now through a separate ESPN app login. While the full ESPN Unlimited integration into the YouTube TV interface isn’t live yet, YouTube TV subscribers on plans that include ESPN can already access a version of ESPN Unlimited content through the ESPN app separately. Open the ESPN app, tap “Log In With TV Provider,” select YouTube TV, and sign in with your Google account. This authenticates you as a YouTube TV subscriber inside the ESPN app and unlocks additional ESPN content beyond the linear channels. It’s not the same as the full integrated experience β€” you’re using two separate apps β€” but it gives you access to ESPN’s on-demand library, some streaming events, and enhanced features right now without waiting. If you specifically need full ESPN Unlimited features (including streaming-exclusive events, WWE, and the complete ESPN Select content library), and you don’t want to wait until fall, subscribing to ESPN Unlimited directly at espn.com for $29.99/month gets you everything immediately β€” though you’d then be paying for ESPN content twice (once through YouTube TV for linear channels, once through ESPN directly for Unlimited). Most subscribers find it cleaner to wait for the YouTube TV integration rather than stack subscriptions.
πŸ“± Partial access now: ESPN app β†’ Log In With TV Provider β†’ YouTube TV ⏳ Full Unlimited in YouTube TV: coming fall 2026 β€” no action needed πŸ’³ Want it immediately: subscribe separately at espn.com β€” $29.99/mo ⚠️ Don’t pay twice: most subscribers should wait for the included integration
I’m a senior and confused by all the new YouTube TV plans. Which one is right for me?
SENIORS Β· PLAN CHOICE
The short version: if you watch ESPN and local TV, get the Sports Plan. If you mainly watch local channels, news, and shows β€” not sports β€” the Entertainment Plan costs less and might be enough. Here’s a plain-language breakdown. If your TV week includes: football on Monday night (ESPN), basketball on ESPN, local news, and maybe some general cable entertainment β€” the Sports Plan at $64.99/month covers all of it and is $18/month cheaper than the old plan. If your week is mostly: local news, local evening broadcast shows, ABC/CBS/NBC primetime, HGTV, Hallmark, and you don’t care about ESPN β€” the Entertainment Plan at $54.99/month handles that for even less. If you want everything and don’t want to think about it β€” the main plan at $82.99/month includes every channel across all categories. One thing that doesn’t change with any YouTube TV plan: the interface, unlimited cloud DVR (record any show and watch later), streaming on up to three devices at once, and the ability to set up a family account with up to six individual profiles. Those features come with all plans. You can switch between plans at any time through your account settings at tv.youtube.com β€” no contract, no penalty, and the change takes effect at your next billing cycle.
🏈 Watch ESPN + local TV: Sports Plan β€” $64.99/mo πŸ“Ί No ESPN, just shows + news: Entertainment Plan β€” $54.99/mo πŸ“Ό All plans include: unlimited DVR Β· 3 streams Β· 6 profiles Β· no contract πŸ”„ Switch anytime: tv.youtube.com β†’ Settings β†’ Membership β†’ Change Plan
Will another blackout happen? How do I protect myself if ESPN goes dark again?
BLACKOUT PROTECTION
The current multi-year deal means another Disney/YouTube TV dispute isn’t on the horizon in the near term β€” but carriage disputes are a recurring reality of the streaming TV industry, and preparation is smart. The most practical protection: set up a free backup before you ever need it. Download the Sling TV app and create an account now β€” Sling Orange at $45.99/month includes ESPN and ESPN2 with no contract. If ESPN disappears from YouTube TV again due to a future dispute, subscribing to Sling takes about five minutes. Similarly, the ESPN + FOX One bundle at $39.99/month from espn.com gives you ESPN directly from Disney β€” no platform middleman β€” which means a YouTube TV dispute can’t knock it out. For ABC specifically, a $20–$35 HD antenna plugged into your TV’s antenna port gives you free ABC, CBS, NBC, and FOX broadcasts permanently, regardless of any streaming service dispute. Running an antenna alongside YouTube TV is the most resilient setup for people who felt most burned by losing ABC during the NFL games. Next time an NFL Sunday, playoff game, or Super Bowl is on ABC and a dispute hits YouTube TV, the antenna keeps working without any subscription.
πŸ›‘οΈ Backup option: Sling TV β€” no contract Β· $45.99/mo Orange plan with ESPN πŸ“‘ ABC protection: HD antenna β€” free ABC broadcasts forever Β· $20–$35 once πŸ“± ESPN direct: subscribe at espn.com for $29.99/mo β€” immune to YouTube TV disputes πŸ”” Stay informed: sign up for YouTube TV email alerts at tv.youtube.com/settings
Is YouTube TV still worth it compared to Hulu + Live TV or Sling after all this?
IS IT WORTH IT Β· COMPARING OPTIONS
For most sports-focused households, yes β€” especially with the new Sports Plan pricing and ESPN Unlimited coming this fall. The case for staying on YouTube TV: no service currently offers better multiview (watching four games simultaneously on one screen), the unlimited cloud DVR is the most generous of any live TV platform, YouTube TV has the best interface of any live TV streaming service by most independent assessments, and the new Sports Plan at $64.99 is cheaper than Hulu + Live TV ($89.99) while including more sports channels. The case for Hulu + Live TV: it bundles Disney+ and Hulu on-demand streaming into the same price, so if your household actively uses both streaming services, the combined value is strong. Sling Orange at $45.99/month is cheaper than either, but limits you to one stream at a time β€” a real problem in households where multiple people watch different things. If the November 2025 blackout genuinely scared you about YouTube TV’s long-term stability, that concern is understandable, but every live TV streaming service β€” including Hulu + Live TV (which had a two-week Disney blackout in 2022 for similar reasons) and DISH/Sling (which faces its own active Disney dispute in 2026) β€” is vulnerable to carriage disputes. The risk is not unique to YouTube TV. The new multi-year deal and ESPN Unlimited integration strengthen YouTube TV’s sports value significantly for the foreseeable future.
πŸ† YouTube TV Sports Plan: $64.99/mo Β· multiview Β· unlimited DVR Β· ESPN this fall 🎬 Hulu + Live TV: $89.99/mo Β· includes Disney+ + Hulu Β· 3-day trial πŸ’° Sling Orange: $45.99/mo cheapest with ESPN Β· only 1 stream at a time ⚠️ All platforms face carriage risk β€” YouTube TV not uniquely vulnerable
πŸ“ Find Help Near You

Use the buttons below to find tech help for setting up YouTube TV on your devices, electronics stores for streaming devices or antennas, or local libraries with free internet assistance. Always verify current YouTube TV plan pricing at tv.youtube.com.

Searching near you…
πŸ”‘ Quick Reference β€” YouTube TV & ESPN Contacts and Links
πŸ“Ί YouTube TV plans & sign up: tv.youtube.com πŸ“‹ Sports Plan ($64.99/mo): tv.youtube.com β†’ Choose Plan β†’ Sports πŸ“± YouTube TV app: search “YouTube TV” on Roku, Fire TV, Apple TV, or smart TV app store πŸ’¬ YouTube TV support: tv.youtube.com/support or Google search “YouTube TV support” πŸ”„ Change or cancel plan: tv.youtube.com β†’ Settings β†’ Membership πŸ“‘ ESPN app (log in with YouTube TV): App Store or Google Play β†’ search “ESPN” πŸ’° $20 credit (blackout): check billing history at tv.youtube.com if you haven’t seen it 🎬 Alternative: Hulu + Live TV ($89.99/mo) Β· hulu.com/live-tv Β· 3-day trial πŸ’° Budget alternative: Sling Orange ($45.99/mo) Β· sling.com Β· ESPN + ESPN2 πŸ“‘ Free ABC backup: HD antenna Β· plug into TV “ANT IN” Β· run channel scan
βœ… 5 Things to Do Right Now as a YouTube TV Subscriber
  • Confirm ESPN and ABC are showing in your guide. Open YouTube TV, search “ESPN,” and verify it appears as a live channel. If it doesn’t, restart the app β€” the blackout is over and it should be there. If the restart doesn’t fix it, check your current plan at tv.youtube.com to confirm you’re on the Sports Plan or main plan, not the Entertainment Plan.
  • Check your account for the $20 credit. YouTube TV issued one-time $20 credits to all subscribers who were affected by the October–November 2025 Disney blackout. Log in at tv.youtube.com, go to Settings, then Billing to see if the credit appears on your account history.
  • Consider switching to the Sports Plan to save money. If you’re currently on the main $82.99/month plan and primarily watch sports and local TV, the Sports Plan at $64.99/month (or $54.99 for new subscribers) gives you the same ESPN, ABC, CBS, FOX, NBC, FS1, and sports channels for $18 less per month. Switching takes two minutes at tv.youtube.com β†’ Settings β†’ Membership β†’ Change Plan.
  • Set up the ESPN app with your YouTube TV login. Open the ESPN app on your phone, tablet, or smart TV. Tap “Log In With TV Provider,” select YouTube TV, and sign in with your Google account. This gives you ESPN access through the ESPN app as well as YouTube TV β€” useful when you want to use ESPN’s sports-specific interface or watch away from home.
  • Get an HD antenna as a permanent backup for local channels. A $20–$35 indoor antenna plugged into your TV’s antenna port gives you free ABC, CBS, NBC, and FOX broadcasts β€” regardless of any streaming service dispute β€” for the life of the antenna. If another carriage dispute ever happens, you’ll have local sports and news covered without paying anything extra.

YouTube TV plan pricing, channel availability, and ESPN Unlimited integration timelines are subject to change without notice. Information reflects publicly available details as of this writing β€” always verify current plans, channel lineups, and pricing at tv.youtube.com before subscribing or changing your plan. Local channel availability varies by zip code. This page has no affiliation with YouTube, Google, ESPN, Disney, or any company mentioned.

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