May pickRoku Streaming Stick 4K — one stick, 500+ free live channels, no monthly feeAbout $40 one-time. The Roku Channel's clean live guide beats any antenna and works on every TV.Get one on Amazon →
NFL, NBA, MLB, college football — never miss a game
1-2 adults, no kids
Recommended total
$262/mo
$/mo
Enter your current bill above to see your savings — or take the Tailor Fit quiz for a fully personalized plan.
We built this around your priorities: all-sports-coverage, regional-sports-network, reliability. Pair YouTube TV + NFL Sunday Ticket ($143/mo) with Consolidated Communications 1 Gig ($90/mo), run it through a Roku Ultra (2024), and keep ESPN+ + Prime Video with Ads + Peacock Premium with Ads. Matches the spirit of your ideal outcome — YouTube TV with Sunday Ticket OR Fubo Pro + ESPN+ + Peacock for exclusive NFL games.
Our Pick · What we'd actually install
What we install in real client homes
Bear & Rick · 66 combined years installing cable + AV
AppsESPN+ $12/mo · Prime Video with Ads $9/mo · Peacock Premium with Ads $8/mo
A sports household needs three layers: a strong Live TV base for national games (ESPN, ABC, NBC, FOX, CBS), the right RSN coverage for local team games, and out-of-market packages for league-wide viewing. Our pick: YouTube TV ($82.99/mo) for the cable channels + locals, NFL Sunday Ticket ($35.36/mo amortized) for OOM NFL, ESPN+ ($11.99) for additional games. If your team plays on MASN/SNY/NESN/Marquee/FanDuel Sports, swap YouTube TV for DirecTV Stream ($114.99) which carries the most RSNs. Pair with a Roku Streaming Stick 4K ($50 one-time). Total monthly during football season: ~$135-165 depending on RSN needs. Off-season drops to ~$95. Set a calendar reminder to cancel Sunday Ticket in February — pause-and-resume is allowed. Skip Fubo unless you specifically need FanDuel Sports RSNs in your market.
Five puzzle pieces — internet, network, device, Live TV, and apps. You only get the experience the weakest piece allows, so we recommend the whole stack, not just one product. Why this matters →
Internet
Consolidated Communications — 1 Gig
$90/mo · 940 Mbps · fiber
Symmetrical fiber for 4+ simultaneous 4K streams + WFH uploads. Sports junkies need this floor — 4K live games plus concurrent streams stress the line. No fallback to 500 Mbps for this tier.
Heads up — your house wiring. Cat6 — modern construction or recent rewire. If your house is pre-2015 and never re-wired, Cat5e is likely and caps wired speed at 1 Gbps. See /guides/multi-gig-internet-prep/ for details.
Three paths for your household — pick the one that fits
These are three complete packages, not just three Live TV picks. Each has its own device, its own apps, its own monthly total. Choose based on who's holding the remote. The app lists below show what pairs naturally with each path — not what to keep or drop from your current stack.
Recommended
Modern · streaming
YouTube TV + NFL Sunday Ticket
$143/mo Live TV
Same YouTube TV base + every out-of-market NFL Sunday game.
Same Spectrum TV service, same channel lineup, but accessed via the Spectrum Stream app on a Roku / Fire TV / Apple TV. Saves the $15/mo per-TV box rental — you provide a $50 streaming device instead.
No box rental — you provide a $100 streaming device per TV.
Best for: Households that want cable channels but skip the $15/mo box rental — same channels via the Spectrum Stream app on a streaming device. Choice TV (~220 channels) via app.
Transparent reference points only — not what we recommend. The cheapest possible setup and the no-compromise premium tier, both with full trade-offs disclosed. Most households should ignore these and stick with Rick's Pick above.
Upload speed usually caps around 35 Mbps even on gigabit plans — when Zoom + cloud backups + security cams run during prime time, streams buffer
Watch for hidden fees — broadcast TV surcharge, regional sports fee, and modem rental can add $40–$60 to the advertised price
Promo pricing typically jumps 30–60% after 12 months — set a calendar reminder to renegotiate
Gigabit speeds rarely sustain during peak hours (7–10pm) when the whole neighborhood is online
No DVR or pause-and-rewind on the free live TV guide
Local news limited to the free broadcast affiliates Roku's guide carries
Only one paid streaming app in the budget — the rest of the catalog drops
This works for: Light-streaming households where saving on the monthly bill beats sustained gigabit speeds. Not great for power users on Zoom calls and 4 TVs simultaneously — those need fiber.
Reference point only — see the Pick for our recommendation.
· Prime Video with Ads $9/mo · Netflix Standard with Ads $8/mo · Max with Ads
Apps that pair with0/mo
· Apple TV+
Apps that pair with0/mo
Most households don't need this
Most households don't need this — but for high-end home theater, prosumer needs, or households that want zero compromises on picture/sound/reliability, this is the no-compromise stack. Top-tier fiber, the best streaming device picture pipeline (Apple TV 4K), every premium app on tap.
Reference point only — see the Pick for our recommendation.
Apps that pair with YouTube TV + NFL Sunday Ticket
Based on the YouTube TV + NFL Sunday Ticket Live TV pick above. This is where each app sits relative to your live channels — pairs well, partially overlaps, or fully duplicates.
Pairs well
Fills gaps the Live TV doesn't cover
Netflix Standard with Ads
$8/mo
Adds prestige originals + films YouTube TV doesn't carry.
Some content shows up in more than one place in your stack. Here's what to do about each.
Partial — depends on usage
Prime Video's Thursday Night Football partially overlaps with NFL Sunday Ticket
Keep only if you use the catalog
Sunday Ticket covers out-of-market Sunday games; Prime carries Thursday Night Football. If you only watch Sunday games, drop Prime ($11/mo). If you want TNF too, keep both — they cover different nights.
Complementary — keep both
Peacock and NBC on your Live TV pick pair well
These pair well together
These solve different problems. NBC live gives you primetime + local news + Sunday Night Football; Peacock carries originals + Premier League + Olympics + SNF replays. Different content, keep both.
Editorial integrity: We recommend the right product whether or not we earn affiliate revenue on it. Apple TV and Starlink, two of our top picks, pay us nothing.
Want a recommendation built around your exact stack?
This page shows what a typical sports junkie household at 04769 should do. The 2-minute quiz asks the 4 questions we need to make this YOUR plan — including which apps you actually have, what your current bill is, and which channels you can't live without.
Pulled from real reader emails — and answered directly so you don't have to dig.
What's the best streaming setup for sports fans?
YouTube TV ($82.99/mo) base + NFL Sunday Ticket ($389/yr or ~$35/mo when amortized over 11 months) covers every NFL game including out-of-market. Add ESPN+ ($11.99) for soccer + UFC pre-2026 archive. For RSNs, swap YouTube TV for DirecTV Stream ($114.99) which carries the most regional sports networks.
Will YouTube TV cover my local MLB / NBA / NHL team?
Depends on the team. MLB local games live on RSNs (MASN, SNY, NESN, Marquee, FanDuel Sports) — YouTube TV has dropped most RSNs. DirecTV Stream and Fubo carry the most RSNs. For NBA/NHL national games (ESPN, ABC, TNT), YouTube TV works. For local team games, check our /sports/ pages for your team specifically.
Is NFL Sunday Ticket worth it?
If you follow an out-of-market NFL team (you live in Maryland but root for Chiefs, etc.), YES — it's the only way to watch every game. If you only watch your local team, NO — your home games air free on CBS/FOX/NBC over an antenna or any live TV service. Cost-per-game math: $389/yr ÷ 18 weeks = $22/week.
What about NBA League Pass for out-of-market basketball?
League Pass Team ($99.99/yr) covers one out-of-market team's games. League Pass Full ($149.99/yr) covers all out-of-market games. Nationally televised games are blacked out — you'll still need ESPN+/YouTube TV for those.
Live in the DMV? Tap a local pro.
Want this installed instead of doing it yourself? A vetted DMV integrator handles everything below.
🛠 DMV-only · vetted local installer
Get it installed by a pro who's done 1,000+ DMV homes.
Moving into a new house, upgrading TVs or speakers, building a home theater, adding smart-home gear, or finally fixing your Wi-Fi — a local installer handles all of it. A 15-minute consult rules out install surprises and usually saves another $50–$200/year on configuration alone.
● 28 years residential AV● 1,000+ DMV installs● Free 15-min consult● No upsells — pre-qualified only
New-home AV designWhole setup planned before you move in
TV install & mountingAbove the fireplace, in-wall power, hidden cables
Home theaterProjector, screen, surround sound, acoustic treatment
Multi-room audioSonos, Bluesound, in-ceiling, outdoor zones
Pulled from real reader emails — and answered directly so you don't have to dig.
What's the best streaming setup for sports fans?
YouTube TV ($82.99/mo) base + NFL Sunday Ticket ($389/yr or ~$35/mo when amortized over 11 months) covers every NFL game including out-of-market. Add ESPN+ ($11.99) for soccer + UFC pre-2026 archive. For RSNs, swap YouTube TV for DirecTV Stream ($114.99) which carries the most regional sports networks.
Will YouTube TV cover my local MLB / NBA / NHL team?
Depends on the team. MLB local games live on RSNs (MASN, SNY, NESN, Marquee, FanDuel Sports) — YouTube TV has dropped most RSNs. DirecTV Stream and Fubo carry the most RSNs. For NBA/NHL national games (ESPN, ABC, TNT), YouTube TV works. For local team games, check our /sports/ pages for your team specifically.
Is NFL Sunday Ticket worth it?
If you follow an out-of-market NFL team (you live in Maryland but root for Chiefs, etc.), YES — it's the only way to watch every game. If you only watch your local team, NO — your home games air free on CBS/FOX/NBC over an antenna or any live TV service. Cost-per-game math: $389/yr ÷ 18 weeks = $22/week.
What about NBA League Pass for out-of-market basketball?
League Pass Team ($99.99/yr) covers one out-of-market team's games. League Pass Full ($149.99/yr) covers all out-of-market games. Nationally televised games are blacked out — you'll still need ESPN+/YouTube TV for those.