Swiss Super League Rights change by country. Some places have local sports channels, while others are only served by the league’s official international service (SFL TV) instead.
Below you’ll find free options first, then the best Swiss Super League streaming services that are paid.

Best Swiss Super League streaming services that are free
If you do not have the budget for paid options, you can always catch live events on the following options:
1. SRG SSR
- Availability: Free-to-air in Switzerland.
- Device support: Watch on regular TV, or stream on the official SRG apps/sites (Play SRF, Play RTS, Play RSI) on phone, tablet, or computer.

SRG SSR is your best free way to watch the Super League live in Switzerland because it shows one match per round on free channels. The service rotates the free match across SRF/RTS/RSI/RTR so every language region gets a live game.
What you don’t get is choice. SRG SSR decides which match is the featured one. So, if your club plays at the same time but isn’t the selected match, you won’t get that full live game here. Still, for a free and legal stream, the quality is strong, and the coverage has clean production, simple commentary, highlights, and recap shows.
Pros:
- Free live match every round.
- Lawful, stable, and high-quality broadcasts for free.
- Works in all Swiss language regions. That is SRF, RTS, RSI, and RTR.
- Easy to stream on official Play platforms.
- Strong highlights and weekly recap shows.
Cons:
- Only one match per round; not full coverage.
- You can’t choose which match is free.
- Replays/highlights can be geo-limited outside Switzerland.
2. Zattoo Switzerland
- Availability: Swiss TV streaming service; includes SRF zwei and RTS 2 in its channel lineup.
- Device support: Smart TV apps plus streaming sticks. Browser viewing on laptop/desktop, and mobile apps for watching on the go.

There is a weekly fee Super League match on SRF zwei or RTS 2. If the fixture is on any of the two, Zattoo is the best way to watch. And with it, you do not need an antenna or cable box.
It helps, especially if you’re in a dorm, traveling inside Switzerland, or you just prefer watching on a laptop. You also get general sports shows and highlights that air on those channels.
Pros:
- Makes the free SRG match easier to watch on any screen.
- Good option if you don’t have a TV antenna/cable.
- Simple to use for families on TV + mobile.
- One login covers multiple devices, hence best for household use.
- Also useful for sports shows and news channels.
Cons:
- Still limited to the one free match SRG shows.
- Quality/features depend on your Zattoo plan and your internet.
3. Swiss Football League and SRF Sport YouTube highlights

- Availability: Worldwide. Some videos may be region-restricted.
- Device support: All devices and updated browsers.
This isn’t for live full matches, but it is a big part of how other fans actually follow the league for free. The Swiss Football League and SRF Sport publish official highlights here. This keeps you in the loop concerning goals, key moments, and quick recaps after the final whistle.
If you’re outside Switzerland, you obviously can’t access free matches. Hence, these free highlights become your free fallback.
Pros:
- Free, official highlights with good editing.
- Works on almost any device with YouTube.
- Great for busy fans who can’t watch full matches.
- Helps you follow multiple clubs quickly.
- Often includes matchday playlists.
Cons:
- Not full live matches.
- Some clips can be geo-blocked.
- You miss full-game context, such as tactics, build-up, etc.
Best Swiss Super League streaming services that are paid in Switzerland
For premium content inside the country, we recommend the following:
1. Blue Sport
- Starting price (Per month): CHF 49.90 or CHF 34.90 on an annual plan.
- Availability: Switzerland.
- Device support: Blue TV app on phones/tablets plus watch in a browser at tv.blue.ch; also works through smart TV setups and TV boxes in the blue TV ecosystem.

If your goal is to catch all the matches and you are inside Switzerland, Blue Sport is the main answer for you. Swisscom’s own announcements confirm blue Sport will show all matches from summer 2025 as part of the domestic rights deal.
With this option, you don’t need to guess which match is “selected.” You can follow your club home and away, week after week, and still get extras like studio shows, matchday coverage, and multiple commentary languages. German/French/Italian are part of the blue Sport offering.
Pros:
- Full league coverage.
- Strong match production and studio coverage.
- An annual plan lowers the monthly cost.
- Also includes other big football competitions in one sports package.
Cons:
- Expensive if you only watch a few matches.
- You still get only one match per round free on SRG.
2. Sunrise TV + blue Sport
- Starting price (Per month): Sunrise lists CHF 34.90/month for an annual blue Sport subscription.
- Availability: Switzerland.
- Device support: Your Sunrise TV setup at home (TV box or smart TV app, where available) plus phone/tablet viewing through supported apps and web options.

This option is not “a different league broadcaster.” It’s a different way to buy the same blue Sport access. If you already use Sunrise for home internet and TV, adding blue Sport inside Sunrise TV is simpler than switching providers or maintaining separate apps.
This route is best when your household already uses Sunrise hardware and billing. You keep one provider, one bill, and you still get the same core Super League coverage that makes blue Sport essential.
Pros:
- Easy if you already pay Sunrise for TV/internet.
- The annual price matches the cheaper blue Sport rate.
- One bill for home TV plus sports add-ons.
- Better for families watching on a main TV.
- Simple setup and is provider-guided.
Cons:
- Still the same premium cost as blue Sport.
- Best value depends on Sunrise contract terms.
- Not useful outside Switzerland for full match access.
3. Wingo TV + blue Sport
- Starting price (Per month): Depends on your Wingo TV plan + blue Sport add-on.
- Availability: Switzerland.
- Device support: A mix-and-match setup: watch on your TV at home, then switch to the blue TV app when you’re on a laptop or mobile.

Wingo is a Swisscom sub-brand, so it’s a popular lower-cost internet + TV choice. The useful part for football fans is that Wingo allows you to add blue Sport through your Wingo customer portal if you have Wingo Internet + TV, using a Swisscom login.
The service is a solid middle ground. This is true if you want a cheaper base TV/internet plan than some premium bundles, but you still want the official Super League coverage that comes with blue Sport.
Pros:
- Simple add-on flow inside the Wingo account tools.
- Good fit if you already use Wingo for internet/TV.
- Uses the same core blue Sport coverage you actually need.
- Easy to move between TV viewing and app viewing.
- Helps reduce “multiple provider” mess.
Cons:
- Total cost depends on your base plan + add-on, so it’s not a single flat number.
- Still premium-priced football rights.
- Availability is tied to Swiss residency/provider setup.
Best Swiss Super League streaming services if you are outside Switzerland
Outside the country, you have these options to catch live matches:
1. SFL TV
- Starting price (Per month): EUR 9.90. The pay-per-view costs EUR 5.00 for a single match on event pages.
- Availability: Made for fans outside Switzerland. It launched to serve international viewers after the OneFootball deal ended.
- Device support: Built for online watching. Hence, browser-based streaming is the core.

If you live abroad, SFL TV is the most important service to know. It’s the league’s own “watch from outside Switzerland” platform. It was created so international fans can still watch the Swiss Super League and Challenge League legally.
Pros:
- Official league service built for international fans.
- Clear pay-per-view and monthly options; good for light watchers.
- Usually includes language choices.
- Better than guessing random local broadcasters.
- Legal and consistent week to week.
Cons:
- Not usable in Switzerland, and some nearby countries are restricted.
- Best experience depends on browser/device compatibility.
- Prices vary by match/event page.
2. Local sports broadcasters
- Starting price (Per month): Varies.
- Availability: Country-by-country.
- Device support: The broadcaster’s own apps and other options, like traditional satellite, depending on the provider.

This league is also shown on local sports channels in some countries. For example, SuperSport (Africa), Arena Sport, or Moja TV (parts of the Balkans), depending on the fixture and territory.
Pros:
- Often includes TV-style coverage with studio shows.
- Works well on big-screen TV setups.
- Sometimes includes local-language commentary.
Cons:
- Rights differ by country. They can change mid-season.
- You may not get every match.