BOXING · Ringside Press

Boxing PPV Schedule — Upcoming Pay-Per-View Fights & Where to Buy

Three vendors, three promoters, one set of rules: you need the subscription and the PPV add-on.

US boxing PPV in 2025-26 runs across three vendors. Each one is tied to a specific promoter, and each one has the same structural rule: the PPV purchase sits on top of the underlying subscription, never as a standalone product.

The three active US boxing PPV vendors

DAZN PPV carries Matchroom Boxing and Queensberry Promotions headliners. Pricing ranges $59.99 to $79.99 per card depending on the headliner’s market. The DAZN US subscription ($24.99 monthly) is required to access the PPV purchase.

Amazon PBC PPV carries Premier Boxing Champions headliners. Pricing has been $79.99 per card since the Showtime-to-Prime transition completed in 2024. An Amazon Prime membership ($14.99 monthly or $139 annual) is required.

ESPN+ PPV carries Top Rank Boxing headliners. Pricing is $79.99 per card. An ESPN+ subscription ($11.99 monthly) is required.

How the math actually works

The minimum cost to watch a single PPV card on launch night, fresh-from-cold, is the underlying subscription plus the PPV fee. That looks like this in 2025-26:

VendorSubscription monthPPV add-onSingle-card total
DAZN PPV$24.99$59.99 to $79.99$84.98 to $104.98
Amazon PBC PPV$14.99$79.99$94.98
ESPN+ PPV$11.99$79.99$91.98

The cheapest single-card route in 2025-26 is therefore a DAZN PPV when DAZN’s PPV pricing comes in at $59.99 (typically the lower-tier UK-headlined cards). The Amazon and ESPN+ paths sit close together around $92 to $95.

For a fan already holding the underlying subscription, the marginal cost drops to just the PPV add-on.

What PPV gets you

A US boxing PPV purchase typically includes the full main-card broadcast, the on-site prelims (usually two to three undercard fights), and the post-fight studio show. The PPV broadcast usually runs three to four hours from prelims open to main-event ring walks.

The PPV fee covers a single broadcast event. There is no “season ticket” for boxing PPVs in the US market.

What is not on PPV

The bulk of the US boxing calendar is not PPV. Across all four promoters (Top Rank, Matchroom, Queensberry, PBC), roughly 80 to 85 percent of cards run as part of the standard subscription with no extra charge. PPV is reserved for the three or four headline cards per promoter per year — typically the biggest names and most lucrative matchups.

A regular monthly subscription to all three platforms (DAZN, Amazon Prime, ESPN+) at roughly $52 per month combined will cover the entire non-PPV calendar of US boxing.

How to buy a PPV

Each vendor sells PPV directly through their own apps and websites:

  • DAZN PPV: dazn.com/en-US, PPV purchase flow opens about two weeks before each card.
  • Amazon PBC PPV: amazon.com/PBC, listed under Prime Video Channels and Live Events.
  • ESPN+ PPV: plus.espn.com, PPV purchase via the ESPN app or web.

Third-party PPV resellers occasionally appear on cable provider menus but the cleanest route — and the only path with full digital rights to the card across all the vendor’s supported devices — is direct purchase from the vendor.

Frequently asked questions

Where can I watch UFC and boxing legally in the US?
ESPN+ subscription carries UFC Fight Night events and ESPN-promoted boxing cards; UFC numbered PPVs require an add-on purchase via ESPN+. DAZN US carries Matchroom and Golden Boy boxing cards. Amazon Prime Video holds the new Premier Boxing Champions deal as of 2026. UFC Fight Pass archives every fight in UFC history plus selected live regional cards.
What does VIPBox refer to in your editorial framing?
In our editorial context, VIPBox refers to the premium ringside seating section at live fight events — the closest paid seats to the canvas. We use the name as an editorial conceit: this guide is the equivalent of the premium ringside experience for legal at-home viewing, anchoring every event to the rights-holder and subscription needed.
Is VIPBox.video the same as vipbox.tv or vipboxtv.com?
No. VIPBox.video is an independent editorial publication and is not affiliated with vipbox.tv, vipboxtv.com, or any other service using a similar name. We list only licensed broadcasters and we do not link to unauthorised feeds.