FanDuel Sports Network (FDSN) is the new name on the channel guide for millions of regional sports fans in the U.S.
But before you put your money on the line, you should know exactly where FDSN works, what teams it actually carries, what it costs, what devices it supports, and so on.

Below are the five core things you must know about FanDuel Sports Network.
1. Where does the FanDuel Sports Network actually operate?
You can only watch FDSN if you live inside one of its regional network footprints. The network covers 15 branded regions, which are essentially the same territories where Bally Sports ran RSNs.
If your home ZIP falls in one of these, you’re eligible to watch via a pay-TV provider or by subscribing directly in the FDSN app. If you’re out of market, the live games are blacked out.
These 15 regional locations include:
- Detroit
- Florida
- Indiana
- Kansas City
- Midwest
- North
- Ohio
- Oklahoma
- SoCal
- South
- Southeast
- Southwest
- Sun
- West
- Wisconsin.
NOTE: “Southeast” covers a wide swath of the South (North Carolina, Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, South Carolina, Tennessee). “South” overlaps parts of the same macro-region. “SoCal/West” addresses Southern California footprints.
Because boundaries are messy, use the ZIP check in the app or the team site’s “How to watch” page before you buy.
And if you are traveling, you can stream temporarily while away from home. However, some out-of-area rules apply, and you’ll see “Out of Area” blocks if you’re beyond your licensed region.
2. What sports and teams do you actually get?
FDSN’s promise is in-market rights to your local MLB, NBA, and NHL teams across those 15 regions. The official team list is subject to change as rights are renegotiated, so please verify your club’s information before subscribing.
As of 2025, FDSN includes the clubs below:
MLB
You’ll see the following teams:
- Atlanta Braves
- Miami Marlins
- Detroit Tigers
- Los Angeles Angels
- Kansas City Royals
- Cincinnati Reds
- St. Louis Cardinals
- Milwaukee Brewers
- Tampa Bay Rays
NBA
The network’s NBA lineup spans:
- Milwaukee Bucks
- Indiana Pacers
- Cleveland Cavaliers
- Memphis Grizzlies
- Miami Heat
- Los Angeles Clippers
- Charlotte Hornets
- Oklahoma City Thunder
- Atlanta Hawks
- Orlando Magic
- Detroit Pistons
- Minnesota Timberwolves
- San Antonio Spurs
NHL
On the ice, FDSN carries:
- Columbus Blue Jackets
- Minnesota Wild
- Florida Panthers
- Nashville Predators
- St. Louis Blues
- Tampa Bay Lightning
- Los Angeles Kings
- Carolina Hurricanes
NOTE: National TV picks still supersede regional rights. If a game is broadcast on a national partner like ESPN, ABC, TNT, or Fox, that game will not be available on your FDSN channel at the same time.
3. What are the pricing and costs of the FanDuel Sports Network
There are several ways to watch content offered by the broadcaster. Here is a breakdown of their prices:
FDSN app
The standard pricing as of 2025 is $19.99/month, $189.99/year, or a single-game pass for $6.99. Those prices are listed in the FDSN help center. The monthly and annual plans are region-specific, so you’ll only see/buy what covers your home’s ZIP code.
There’s also a Season Pass, which is ideal if you’re only interested in the season window rather than year-round content. Typical pricing ranges from around $124.99 in most regions to $140.99 in the Southwest. So, always check the app for your market’s exact offer and dates.

Amazon Prime Video
If you prefer to centralize subscriptions, you can add FDSN as a channel inside Amazon Prime Video in eligible ZIP codes. The service has pegged the add-on at about $19.99/month, matching its official app’s monthly price.
Pay TV
Going this route, you’ll pay the provider’s plan price. FDSN is carried across many lineups. They include:
- DIRECTV/DIRECTV STREAM
- Spectrum
- Xfinity/Comcast
- Cox
- Mediacom
- U-verse TV
- Fubo
If you already have FanDuel Sports Network in your regular pay-TV channel lineup, streaming in the FDSN app is free. Simply sign in with your TV provider credentials.
4. What devices are compatible with FanDuel Sports Network?
FDSN’s app and site cover a wide range of devices. Officially supported platforms include:
- iPhone/iPad and Apple TV (tvOS 16+)
- Android phones/tablets (Android 7+)
- Android TV/Google TV (5.0+)
- Amazon Fire TV (5.0+)
- Roku (OS 12+)
- Samsung Smart TVs (2019+)
- Xbox One/Series consoles
- Chromecast (via Android)
- Windows PCs (Win 7–11)
- macOS
- Xfinity’s Xumo Stream Box
- All current web browsers at fanduelsportsnetwork.com.
5. FDSN viewing features
The app comes with the following features:
- Simultaneous streams & device limits: It allows up to two concurrent streams per account. Its Subscriber Agreement also specifies a limit on registered devices (up to five) that can be attached to your account at a time. Hence, if your home or family members use numerous gadgets simultaneously, plan accordingly to stay within the limit.
- Replays and time-shift: On the official FanDuel Sports Network app, you can pause live games. You could also rewind to the beginning plus watch full replays for 72 hours after a game ends. This also applies to Amazon Prime Video’s FDSN channel.
- Resolution: Regional sports streams are delivered in 720p. Please note that native 4K streams are not currently available in the app. If you’re chasing 4K, you’ll mostly find it on select national broadcasts rather than regional feeds.
- Ads: Paying for FDSN does not remove advertising; you’re watching the live RSN feed with its regular ad breaks. FDSN’s parent ad stack uses Magnite/SpringServe, so ad-supported delivery is part of the business model. If ad-free is essential to you, an RSN product won’t fit that preference.
So, is FanDuel Sports Network worth it?
Yes. But only if you live inside an FDSN market and your priority is watching your local MLB/NBA/NHL teams’ in-market games. The DTC price is straightforward, and the app covers the devices you likely own.
However, this is not the best choice for you if you want out-of-market games, 4K streaming, or truly ad-free baseball/basketball/hockey. FDSN is a regional product, not a league-wide one, and your access stops at the border of your team’s footprint.