America's Favorite Sports
From Sunday gridirons to Saturday hardwood, World Series nights to Stanley Cup playoffs — the games that define a nation, ranked by the fans who live and breathe them. NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL, MLS. Coverage details, statistics, and cultural context.
Stream all 5 major leagues on one app: IPTV plans starting at $108/year
The Five Pillars of American Sports
The major professional leagues that fill the calendar — from the first Sunday of September to the last out of October.
National Football League
American Football · 32 teams
The undisputed king of U.S. sports. 18-week regular season, 14-team playoff bracket, and a Super Bowl that doubles as a national holiday. The league's TV deals run through 2033 at $111 billion combined.
National Basketball Association
Basketball · 30 teams
The most globally exported U.S. league, with a 25-year run as the cultural blueprint for sports media. New 11-year, $76 billion broadcast deal kicks in for 2025-26 — the second-richest in American sports.
Major League Baseball
Baseball · 30 teams
America's oldest pro league still trades on tradition while modernizing the rulebook — pitch clock, larger bases, shift restrictions. The 2023 changes lifted attendance back above 70 million for the first time since 2017.
National Hockey League
Ice Hockey · 32 teams
A binational league with a Canadian heart and an expanding U.S. footprint — Vegas, Seattle, Nashville. The Stanley Cup is the oldest trophy in North American pro sports and arguably the most cinematic playoff in any sport.
Major League Soccer
Soccer · 30 teams
The youngest of the five — and the fastest-growing, especially after Lionel Messi's 2023 arrival at Inter Miami. Apple TV's all-MLS streaming deal is the league's biggest bet on a digital-native, multilingual audience.
Ranked by Fan Share
Percentage of U.S. adults who pick each sport as their favorite to watch — based on Gallup's 2023-24 sports polling. Other categories (auto racing, golf, tennis) round out the top 10.
American Football — 37%
Has held the #1 favorite-sport spot in U.S. polling since 1972. The NFL alone generates more annual revenue than the next two pro leagues combined.
Basketball — 11%
NBA + college basketball combined. March Madness alone draws over 100 million unique viewers across the three-week tournament. The most globally portable U.S. sport.
Baseball — 9%
America's pastime, still the dominant summer sport by attendance — over 70 million in-person tickets sold across the 2024 MLB season. Strong regional loyalty by media market.
Soccer — 7%
The fastest-rising favorite-sport category — up from 2% in 1994. Heavily skewed to younger demographics (18-34) and households with international roots. Co-hosting the 2026 FIFA World Cup is the inflection point.
Auto Racing — 5%
NASCAR, IndyCar, and rising Formula 1 interest (Miami, Austin, Las Vegas Grand Prix). The Daytona 500 still draws 8-9 million viewers and remains a Top-20 annual U.S. sports broadcast.
Ice Hockey — 4%
NHL viewership concentrated in the Northeast, Upper Midwest, and rapidly in Sun Belt expansion markets (Vegas, Tampa, Carolina). Stanley Cup playoffs deliver the highest playoff-vs-regular-season ratings lift of any U.S. league.
Golf — 3%
Anchored by the four majors — Masters, PGA Championship, U.S. Open, The Open. The Masters at Augusta routinely tops 12 million viewers on Sunday — the broadcast standard the rest of the year is measured against.
Tennis — 3%
U.S. Open (Flushing Meadows) is the biggest annual tennis event by attendance globally. Swiatek, Sabalenka, Alcaraz, Sinner driving a young-superstar era after the Big Three's Federer/Nadal/Djokovic generation.
Boxing & MMA — 3%
UFC numbered PPVs lead the combat-sports calendar — five to seven cards a year, $79.99 each. Boxing PPV economy still alive at heavyweight (Fury, Joshua, Wilder, Usyk) and welterweight (Crawford, Spence) levels.
College Football — 3%
Often counted separately from NFL because of regional intensity. The Sugar Bowl, Rose Bowl, and the new 12-team College Football Playoff (introduced 2024-25) regularly outdraw most pro sports broadcasts in their windows.
Frequently Asked Questions — Sports & IPTV
Common questions about streaming sports, IPTV service, legality, and device compatibility.
What's the best IPTV service for NFL fans in 2026?
A 3-device IPTV plan covers every NFL regular-season game (Sunday, Monday Night Football, Thursday primetime) plus playoffs and Super Bowl in 4K HDR. The most popular plan costs $108/year and beats Sunday Ticket + RedZone bundles by price and device flexibility.
Can I watch every NBA game on IPTV without League Pass?
Yes. An IPTV subscription carries every NBA game across all 30 teams — regular season, playoffs, and Finals. Coverage includes games broadcast on ESPN, ABC, TNT, and regional sports networks in 4K HDR without separate League Pass subscription.
Is IPTV cheaper than cable for sports fans?
Significantly. Cable bundles with sports packages (Xfinity Signature, Spectrum Choice) cost $80–$150/month ($960–$1,800/year). IPTV at $108–$189/year is typically 10–15× cheaper while delivering more sports leagues (NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL, MLS, Premier League, Champions League, La Liga, Serie A) in one subscription.
How do I stream live baseball without a cable subscription?
IPTV delivers every MLB game across all 30 teams — including local broadcasts, national games on ESPN/Fox, and postseason play through the World Series. Setup takes 5 minutes on Fire TV, Roku, Apple TV, or Android. No cable box, no regional blackouts.
Is IPTV legal for watching sports?
IPTV is legal when the service holds broadcaster-level licensing for the channels it delivers. Legitimate IPTV providers license feeds from Sky Sports, TNT Sports, Peacock, Paramount+, and other broadcasters. The technology itself (IP-delivered video) is not regulated; the legality hinges on the service's licensing.
What devices can I use to stream sports on IPTV?
IPTV works on Fire TV Stick, Apple TV, Roku, Android TV, Samsung Smart TVs, LG webOS TVs, Nvidia Shield, and phones/tablets (iOS/Android). Native apps on most devices; no HDMI cables or additional boxes needed. All devices get 4K HDR support on compatible apps.
Do I need Sunday Ticket, RedZone, or League Pass if I have IPTV?
No. IPTV's all-in-one subscriptions include NFL Sunday Ticket equivalent (all Sunday games), RedZone access, NBA League Pass equivalent (every game), and comparable coverage for MLB, NHL, and MLS. No bundling or add-on fees.
Why are sports fans switching to IPTV in 2026?
Three reasons: (1) Cost — IPTV at $108–$189/year beats $980+ annual sports bundles. (2) Coverage — one app for NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL, MLS, Premier League, Champions League instead of five separate subscriptions. (3) Flexibility — watch on any device (Fire TV, Apple TV, phone) without contracts, equipment rentals, or installation visits.
How we count fans, viewers, and impact
Fan-share percentages are drawn from Gallup's annual U.S. sports surveys, which have asked the same "favorite sport to watch" question for over 50 years — making it the longest continuous panel of American sports preference. Percentages don't sum to 100 because respondents may decline to pick any sport.
Viewership figures are pulled from Nielsen TV ratings, league press releases, and Adobe Analytics streaming reports for the 2024 calendar year. Super Bowl LVIII (Kansas City vs. San Francisco, Feb 11 2024) drew the highest single-broadcast U.S. audience ever measured — 123.7 million viewers across CBS, Nickelodeon, Univision and Paramount+.
This page is editorial reference content — not affiliated with the NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL, MLS, or any league. League names and acronyms are used for nominative reference only. All trademarks belong to their respective rights holders.