How to watch The Masters without cable
Your legal options
These licensed services carry the networks that show The Masters. For the full ranking, see the best live TV service guide:
- YouTube TV from $83/mo — you want a broad, mainstream lineup with unlimited DVR and reliable local channels in most areas
- Hulu + Live TV from $83/mo — you want live TV bundled with a huge on-demand library plus Disney+ and ESPN+
- FuboTV from $80/mo — you want a sports-heavy lineup with a high channel count and lots of simultaneous streams
- DirecTV Stream from $87/mo — you want a cable-like experience with regional sports networks and unlimited in-home streams
Typical cost: $40-$85/mo, or free featured streams via Masters.com.
Visit official siteOpens YouTube TV’s official site
How to start watching, step by step
- Choose a service above that carries the networks airing The Masters where you live.
- Start the plan — use a free trial first if one is available.
- Install the service’s app on your TV, streaming device, or phone.
- Sign in, open the live guide, and find the game.
Blackouts & regional coverage
Rounds one and two air on ESPN; weekend rounds air on CBS. Masters.com streams some featured coverage free.
Best device for the job
Any device works; wired Ethernet helps for long weekend coverage. See our streaming device picks.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Paying for a plan before confirming it carries your regional sports network.
- Assuming every game is included — some are exclusive to specific networks or streaming apps.
- Falling for a “watch every game for $10” pitch — those are almost always unlicensed and risky. See why that’s a problem.
Double-check before buying
- Confirm your regional sports network (if the league uses one) is included for your ZIP code.
- Check whether nationally televised games and local games are both covered.
- Verify the current price and trial terms before you subscribe.
Frequently asked questions
Can I watch The Masters without cable legally?
Yes. Several licensed live-TV streaming services carry the networks that show The Masters. Pick one that includes the right channels for your area and start streaming — no cable box required.
What is the cheapest way to watch The Masters?
It depends on which games and networks you need. Compare the services listed above, use a free trial where one exists, and pick the smallest plan that includes your channels.
Are there blackouts for The Masters on streaming?
Rounds one and two air on ESPN; weekend rounds air on CBS. Masters.com streams some featured coverage free.