Nothing beats the feeling of catching your hometown Triple-A team’s live games without pulling your hair out hunting down scattered feeds.
Here’s a list of the best sites to watch Minor League Baseball games live for free or with a subscription

1. Bally MiLB Zone
- Starting price: Free
- Availability: United States.
- Channels: N/A.
- Device support: Web browser (desktop), iOS & Android apps, Roku/Fire/Apple TV availability rolling out; Chromecast support; in-browser multiview.

Bally Sports Live is among the best sites to watch Minor League Baseball games live.
It is an official MiLB partner that aggregates thousands of minor-league games into a single “MiLB Zone” where you can follow multiple games and get live stats.
Pros:
- Multiview and live stats are built into the player.
- Fast access to local team channels.
- Clean desktop experience for multi-game scouting.
Cons:
- Some production quality varies by venue (camera/graphics).
2. MLB.com Free Game of the Day
- Starting price: Free
- Availability: Globally.
- Channels: N/A.
- Device support: Web browser (mlb.com / milb.com), MLB app on iOS/Android, connected devices via MLB apps.

MLB and MiLB run a rotating “Free Game of the Day” and frequently carry curated prospect matchups and highlights directly on MLB.com, the MLB Pipeline hub, and MiLB.com.
That’s very useful when you don’t need every game but want the standout cards.
Pros:
- High-quality, editorially selected matchups and Prospect coverage.
- Great on-demand highlight packages for quick scouting.
- Works worldwide.
Cons:
- Not full-season access.
3. Team websites & official team channels (club streams)
- Starting price: Free
- Availability: Varies by team
- Channels: N/A.
- Device support: Web, team mobile apps, embedded players, and team YouTube pages (often iOS/Android + TV casting).

Many MiLB clubs (Like Tripple A) run their own video feeds or embed their broadcast on the team website, often freely available or behind a modest club login. If you’re a fan of a specific team, go to that club’s official site, you’ll find links for “Watch/Live Video” that point to team-produced broadcasts
Pros:
- Direct, club-produced broadcasts with team-specific features.
- You’ll get in-park graphics, interviews, and local angle.
Cons:
- Some feeds are geo-restricted or require a local login.
4. YouTube MiLB official channel + team channels
- Starting price: Free
- Availability: Worldwide.
- Channels: N/A.
- Device support: Web, YouTube apps on iOS/Android/Smart TV/Chromecast/Roku/Apple TV/Fire TV.

MiLB’s official channel posts highlights, FastCasts, and season playlists.
Many teams mirror their broadcast content or post full-game replays and special streams on their official YouTube channels.
Pros:
- Excellent for replays and highlight packages.
- Some teams stream live on YouTube.
- No special app installs beyond YouTube.
Cons:
- Not guaranteed live full-season access.
5. Local broadcasters
- Starting price: Free
- Availability: Local markets.
- Channels: Depends on station/RSN.
- Device support: Station websites, station apps, streaming bundles that carry RSNs (Fubo, YouTube TV, Hulu + Live TV).

A number of MiLB teams still have local TV arrangements. A handful of games will air on local broadcast affiliates or local cable networks; those streams are sometimes free on the station’s website or via a live-TV streaming bundle that carries the RSN.
Pros:
- Free or included in existing cable/streaming bundles.
- Good backup if the club’s own feed is down.
- Local announcers and community focus.
Cons:
- Patchy, as many teams don’t have local TV deals.
- TV schedules may skip lower-interest midweek games.
6. MiLB
- Starting price (Per month): $12.99.
- Availability: Every country where they have broadcast rights.
- Channels: N/A.
- Device support: iOS & Android apps, web player, Fire TV/Apple TV/Chromecast/Android TV, and consoles supported through MiLB/MLB apps; logins on multiple devices.
- Simultaneous streams: Up to 5.

If you want full, day-in, day-out access to the majority of MiLB games, the MiLB package is the best paid solution.
It’s inexpensive relative to mainstream sports subscriptions and gives you the breadth of coverage. It includes home games across Triple-A and Double-A, hundreds of High-A/Single-A matchups, replays, and archives.
Pros:
- Very affordable for full-season MiLB access.
- Massive game library + on-demand replays.
- Integrated scoring, player pages, and search.
- Multiview & DVR features on supported devices.
Cons:
- Occasional geo-blackouts for specific local markets.
7. MLB At Bat
- Starting price: $6.99 a month. $29.99 annually.
- Availability: International.
- Channels: N/A.
- Device support: MLB app on iOS and Android. Plus all connected devices, like Apple TV, Fire TV, Android TV, consoles, and any other gadget with an updated web browser.
- Simultaneous streams: Up to 5.

This is the best if you already follow MLB and want MiLB on the same subscription and the convenience of MLB’s superior app and DVR.
At Bat is the nicer UX, even if it’s a bit more expensive than the cheap MiLB.TV. You get polished video controls, multiview on supported TV devices, and better pipeline content that pairs well with prospect watching.
Pros:
- Polished app and robust multiview/DVR features.
- Good device support and reliability.
- Single account for both MLB and MiLB users.
Cons:
- Pricier than the cheapest MiLB options.
8. YouTube TV
- Starting price (Per month): $82.99.
- Availability: United States.
- Channels: 100+.
- Device support: Almost any connected device is supported. These include smart TVs, streaming sticks, and operating systems like Roku/Apple/Fire/Android TV, and web.
- Simultaneous streams: 3 concurrent streams for the base plan. But add-ons are available for more.

If your local MiLB coverage is carried by a regional sports network or local affiliate, YouTube TV is a solid paid route that bundles those networks with cloud DVR and multiview.
You’ll pay a mainstream streaming price, but you get local channels, RSNs, and the ability to DVR games for later.
Pros:
- Unlimited DVR and good device support.
- Reliable, high-quality streams.
- One account for local TV + national sports.
Cons:
- Expensive for users who only want MiLB.
9. FuboTV
- Starting price (Per month): $84.99+.
- Availability: United States.
- Channels: 80–100+ (plan dependent).
- Device support: All current and updated site browsers, iOS and Android OS, Apple, Google, and Android TV, Roku boxes, TVs and sticks, Fire TV, and gaming consoles.
- Simultaneous streams: Up to 10.

Fubo is the sports-first streaming bundle that frequently includes the RSNs and local channels you need to catch in-market MiLB telecasts.
Fubo’s advantage is sports features and flexible device limits if you pay for the higher plan.
Pros:
- Sports-oriented features, such as multiview and a good DVR.
- RSN add-ons and flexible device limits with upgrades.
- Good for following local markets and national sports.
Cons:
- Price climbs with RSN add-ons and multi-device upgrades.
10. Team / RSN direct DTC services and club subscriptions
- Starting price: Varies widely: Victory+ seasonal DTC around $100 / season, other team DTC packages vary.
- Availability: Market-specific.
- Channels: N/A.
- Device support: Web players, team apps, Apple TV/Fire/Android TV/Chromecast as offered by the club/RSN.
- Simultaneous streams: Depends on the team/RSN Terms.

Some clubs and a few MLB/RSN partners offer their own season passes or direct streams. These services are the most exact way to get every in-market feed from a particular organization if traditional RSNs are unavailable or fragmented.
For fans who need every local game live, a single team DTC can be worth the price, especially when teams bundle extra content and archives.
Pros:
- Most complete in-market access for a specific team.
- Team-produced broadcasts and exclusive content.
- Often priced competitively for local fans.
- Bundles with tickets, content, and team perks at times.
Cons:
- You need one DTC per team. Hence, the cost adds up if you follow many teams.
- Availability is inconsistent across clubs and seasons.