The short answer
To watch Serie A in Canada for 2025-26 there are two complementary routes, and the Italian-Canadian audience is well served. Fubo Canada carries all Serie A matches on its sports tier — the comprehensive option, with every game live. TLN (Telelatino), the multicultural broadcaster with a long history serving Italian-Canadians, shows three Serie A games a week on its channel and through its VIVA streaming app, under a deal that runs through 2026-27. So: Fubo for every match, or TLN/VIVA for a curated three games a week (often the marquee fixtures the Italian-Canadian community most wants). There is no free-to-air Serie A in Canada. Check Fubo and TLN/VIVA for their current prices at sign-up.
Fubo Canada: every Serie A match
Fubo Canada is the comprehensive route to Serie A north of the border, carrying all of the league's matches on its sports tier. For a Canadian fan who wants the whole of Serie A — every Milan and Rome derby, every Juventus, Napoli and Inter fixture, the full breadth of the round — Fubo is the subscription that delivers it live.
Fubo Canada is a sports-focused live-TV streaming service, and its Serie A coverage sits on the sports tier (priced around C$26.99 per month, though tiers and pricing change, so check Fubo's current sports-tier price at sign-up). It streams on smart TVs, Fire TV, Apple TV, Roku, Chromecast, consoles, phones, tablets and the web, with cloud DVR so you can record the early-morning kick-offs and watch them later. For a completist Serie A fan in Canada, Fubo is the natural primary subscription; because it is a rolling subscription, you can take it for the stretch of the season you most want and cancel between.
TLN and VIVA: three games a week for the Italian-Canadian audience
TLN (Telelatino) is the broadcaster built for this audience. A long-established Canadian multicultural network with deep roots in the Italian-Canadian community, TLN carries three Serie A games a week — typically the marquee fixtures the community most wants to watch — on its TV channel and through its VIVA streaming app, under a rights deal that runs through the 2026-27 season.
For many Italian-Canadian households, TLN is the familiar home of Serie A: the channel is already part of their TV package, and the three-games-a-week slate covers the big matches without needing the full Fubo subscription. VIVA, TLN's streaming app, brings the same coverage to cord-cutters — streamed on smart TVs, phones, tablets and the web. TLN is reachable as a channel through Canadian TV providers, and VIVA as a direct streaming subscription; check TLN/VIVA for the current price at sign-up. For a fan happy with three curated games a week rather than every match, TLN/VIVA is the route — and the multi-year deal through 2026-27 means it is a settled arrangement.
Is Serie A free to watch in Canada?
No. There is no free-to-air live Serie A coverage in Canada — the live rights sit with Fubo (all matches) and TLN/VIVA (three games a week), so every live match requires one of those subscriptions.
What is free: highlights and clips. Serie A's and the clubs' official YouTube and social channels post key moments and recap content after matches, and football highlights shows carry Italian-football roundups. But a complete live match is not available free in Canada.
The cheapest workable approach depends on how much you want. If three marquee games a week is enough, TLN/VIVA is the lighter-touch route — and many Italian-Canadian households already have TLN in their TV package. If you want every match, Fubo's sports tier is the comprehensive option. Both are rolling subscriptions, so you can take the one you need for the stretch of the season you most want — a title run-in, your club's big games — and cancel between.
Cost summary and Canadian kick-off times for Serie A
The two routes to Serie A in Canada are Fubo (all matches, on its sports tier at around C$26.99 per month — check the current price) and TLN/VIVA (three games a week, through 2026-27 — check the current price). Fubo is the comprehensive choice; TLN/VIVA is the curated, community-focused one, often already in an Italian-Canadian household's TV package. There is no free live alternative.
On timing, Serie A is a morning-and-early-afternoon watch in Canada. Italy is on CET, six hours ahead of Canadian Eastern time (nine ahead of Pacific). The Italian slots of roughly 12:30, 3:00, 6:00 and 8:45 p.m. CET land at about 6:30 a.m., 9:00 a.m., 12:00 p.m. and 2:45 p.m. ET. So the early Italian game is a Canadian breakfast-time watch and the marquee late Sunday-night Italian match is a mid-afternoon ET kick-off — and on the West Coast it is three hours earlier still, so the early game is a 3:30 a.m. PT start best caught on Fubo's cloud DVR. Check Matchcast for the exact Canadian kick-off time of every Serie A fixture, with the broadcaster on each match page.