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ESPN Select

 & Jordan Minor Principal Writer, Software
 & Ben Moore Managing Editor, Software
Our Experts
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65 EXPERTS
43 YEARS
41,500+ REVIEWS
ESPN Select - Software & Service (Credit: ESPN)
3.5 Good

The Bottom Line

ESPN Select allows you to stream live sports and archived ESPN shows, but it restricts access to the channel's flagship programming to pricier tiers.

Pros & Cons

    • Lots of live sports, particularly college sports
    • Reliable streaming performance in testing
    • On-demand access to ESPN's high-quality archives
    • Supports offline downloads on mobile
    • Lacks ESPN's core programming
    • No live NBA or NFL games
    • Lacks DVR functionality
    • Can't make subscription changes using the mobile app

ESPN Select Specs

Ads
Concurrent Streams 3
DVR Storage & Retention None
Live TV
Monday Night Football Simulcast of ESPN2's Monday Night Football Broadcast With the Mannings
Offline Downloads on Mobile
On-Demand Movies and TV Shows
Original Programming
Regular Season National NHL Coverage NHL.TV Package (out-of-market games)
RSN Coverage None
Sports Coverage MLB, NCAA, NHL, Tennis
Starting Price $12.99 per month
Sunday Football None
Sunday Night Football None
Thursday Night Football None

Cord-cutters turn to video streaming services for many reasons, including sports. If you want to watch the occasional MLB or NHL game, soccer matchups, or lots of college action, ESPN Select (formerly ESPN+) is for you. The streaming service delivers a respectable lineup of live and on-demand sports, as well as the top-notch 30 for 30 and E:60 productions. However, the service lacks flagship ESPN shows, such as The Pat McAfee Show and SportsCenter, as well as live NBA and NFL broadcasts. Still, despite its steadily increasing price over the years, ESPN Select's relatively low cost (either as a standalone service or part of a bundle) might be enough to encourage you to add it to your streaming lineup.

Plans and Prices

If you were already subscribed to ESPN+, you are now automatically subscribed to ESPN Select, which includes everything ESPN+ offered. It has many original ESPN Select shows and certain programs from the cable giant (more on that later). On its own, ESPN Select costs $12.99 per month (or $129.99 per year). However, you can also purchase it in a bundle with ad-supported Disney+ and Hulu for $19.99 per month. If you prefer not to watch ads, a commercial-free bundle is available for $29.99 per month. Like Disney+ and Netflix, ESPN Select no longer has a free trial.

(Credit: ESPN/PCMag)

ESPN offers another, more comprehensive premium streaming service: ESPN Unlimited. It significantly expands the library by granting streaming access to all ESPN cable channels, addressing a major limitation of ESPN Select. If you have cable or certain live TV streaming services, you can stream ESPN Unlimited without additional cost. If you don't have one of those options, ESPN Unlimited costs $29.99 per month (or $299.99 per year), more than twice the price of ESPN Select.

Still, both plans have lower prices than several other live streaming services. Fubo costs $84.99 per month. Hulu + Live TV charges $89.99 per month. YouTube TV is $82.99 per month. Sling TV's Orange and Blue plans cost $46 and $51 per month, respectively (or $66 per month as a bundle). Paramount+'s ad-free tier costs $12.99 per month, and Peacock's Premium tier starts at $7.99 per month, but they don't have as robust sports libraries.

Aside from watching ESPN Select on the web, you can download apps for mobile platforms (Android and iOS), media streaming devices (Apple TV, Chromecast, Fire TV, and Roku), and gaming devices (PlayStation 5, PlayStation 4, Xbox Series X/S, and Xbox One).

What Can You Watch on ESPN Select?

The first thing to understand about ESPN Select is that it is not the same as the regular ESPN channel on cable or the channel that live TV streaming services, such as Hulu + Live TV or Sling TV, offer. ESPN Select complements the main channel, but lacks its core programming.

ESPN Select's programs are divided into three main content areas: live sports, ESPN+ originals (it still uses the old branding), and ESPN shows. Of the major national sports leagues in the US, ESPN Select streams live, out-of-market MLB and NHL games, as well as full replays of many of those matchups. You can also watch live NBA G League games or college football matchups airing on ABC or the ESPN cable network.

However, you must turn to a different sports streaming service to watch other national games, including ESPN's Monday Night Football. Fans should check out our dedicated roundups for the best MLBNBA, and NFL streaming services for more information on streaming those leagues.

(Credit: ESPN/PCMag)

As for other sports, ESPN Select includes PGA Tour coverage, but not complete tournament broadcasts. Instead, it shows featured holes for the last two days of an event. ESPN Select also streams international sports, including cricket and rugby. However, global soccer fans now require Apple TV to stream MLS matches. If you're hyped for the World Cup, check out No Cable? Here's How to Stream the FIFA World Cup.

One area where ESPN Select excels is in its coverage of men's and women's NCAA sports, including basketball, baseball, field hockey, football, ice hockey, lacrosse, soccer, softball, swimming and diving, track and field, volleyball, and wrestling. However, ESPN Select's coverage of combat sports has diminished. PFL is locked to ESPN Unlimited, and the UFC has shifted to Paramount+. Dazn is a good option for MMA and boxing fans, as it streams events from Bellator, Combate Americas, GGG Promotions, Golden Boy Promotions, Matchroom Boxing, and other promotions. Netflix also streams Jake Paul's attention-grabbing boxing events.

ESPN produces in-house series exclusively for the platform. These shows include Detail, a franchise that features in-depth analysis from top competitors across different sports; ESPN FC, a daily soccer show; In the Crease, which provides daily hockey analysis and highlights; and Peyton's Places, a multipart documentary starring Peyton Manning. The service offers the entire archive of ESPN's 30 for 30, E:60, Greeny, SC Featured, and SportsNation.

Based on its offerings, ESPN Select is more comparable to a single-network service, such as Paramount+, than to live TV streaming services like Fubo or YouTube TV. Similar to ESPN Select, Paramount+ grants access to live CBS coverage (including both sports and news broadcasts), original series (such as Star Trek: Discovery and The Good Fight), and on-demand shows from ViacomCBS's vast archives (including The Twilight Zone and all the original Star Trek series). NBC's Peacock is also emerging as a potential competitor to ESPN Select. Peacock's paid tiers include Premier League, IndyCar, and select NFL playoff games.

(Credit: ESPN/PCMag)

ESPN Select on the Web

To sign up for an ESPN Select subscription, you must provide an email address and create a password. To access ESPN Select via the web, visit the watch tab on the ESPN homepage or go directly to espn.com/watch or plus.espn.com. You can also manage your subscription from the web.

You navigate the ESPN Select page via a top menu bar with the following sections: Featured, Originals, Browse, Schedules & Replays, and Articles. The Features section highlights some of the leading live and upcoming events airing on the service, along with notable on-demand shows and ESPN+ originals. The Originals section highlights exclusive programs. In the Browse section, you can filter the catalog by sport, league, conference, or show.

Not everything in the Browse section is available on ESPN Select. Some shows and live events require you to authenticate with your cable or video streaming service account. A golden badge in the upper left corner of each show's thumbnail identifies items available on ESPN Select (these also still use ESPN+ branding).

The Schedules and Replays tab works fine. You can view live, upcoming, and past events and filter by sport and ESPN channel. We wish ESPN Select provided a way to add an event to a watchlist, but the service lacks that feature. One perk of an ESPN Select subscription is access to exclusive articles featuring in-depth sports analysis. Some movie streaming services, such as Filmatique and Mubi, also provide editorial content as part of their subscriptions.

A show's details page includes the length, year, director, and a brief description. You can't leave a review or rating on any on-demand content. ESPN Select also lists titles you may enjoy, and the AI-powered SportsCenter feature provides daily personalized highlights.

(Credit: ESPN/PCMag)

ESPN Select on Mobile

ESPN Select is available within ESPN's mobile app, also known as ESPN. We had no trouble downloading the app and logging in on an Android phone. The interface is attractive, with a black background, white text, and yellow highlights. The app is quick to navigate and didn't crash during testing. You must enable your location before you can watch anything, however.

The section is organized into two tabs: Stream and Articles. The Stream tab functions identically to the Featured section in the web interface. There, you can browse through live sports events and on-demand shows. The Articles tab serves as an interface for reading the exclusive articles included with your subscription.

In the upper-right corner, you'll find a search bar and icons for your downloaded content, the sports schedule, and settings. You can search by team, leagues, and events. The Downloads section organizes your offline titles and lets you browse the shows eligible for offline mobile viewing. Not all features or episodes of a series can be downloaded; you will see a download icon if they are available. The ability to download titles from ESPN Select is greatly appreciated. For reference, a 20-minute episode took less than two minutes to download.

The Settings section lets you set autoplay preferences, restrict downloads to Wi-Fi connections, and choose a download quality (HD or SD). Closed captions options depend on your device's built-in settings. You must head to the ESPN website to make changes to your subscription.

(Credit: ESPN/PCMag)

ESPN Select Playback Experience

ESPN Select's playback interface on the web works fine. Aside from the standard playback and volume controls, you get 10-second rewind and fast-forward buttons, a go-to-live button, and a toggle for the closed captions. You can customize the captions directly from the playback screen, an accessibility option we like to see. ESPN lets you scrub to the beginning of an event, no matter when you tune in. The mobile interface looks identical. One advantage of the mobile app is that, on select sporting events, you can view a scorecard of the event below the minimized playback screen.

ESPN Select supports up to three simultaneous streams per account, which is about average for streaming services. Previously, it supported five concurrent streams, so this is a downgrade. Hulu + Live TV and Fubo offer add-ons to expand their support beyond their default of two concurrent streams. ESPN also supports multiview, so you can watch up to four games simultaneously on a single screen. It's a terrific addition during playoff season.

We couldn't confirm the exact streaming resolution and frame rate of ESPN's live streams, but playback appeared to reach 1080p and 60fps. Both Hulu + Live TV and YouTube TV support 1080p/60fps live streams for select channels on some platforms, as does Paramount+ for some of its local CBS station streams.

DirecTV and Fubo let you start streams from the beginning and replay past events (usually within a three-day limit). ESPN Select enables you to do both of these things, but it's sometimes unclear which replays of live events are available.

However, ESPN Select lacks DVR capabilities, which is a big deal for a sports streaming service. YouTube TV lets you record unlimited content and keep those recordings for nine months. Sling TV provides 50 hours of DVR storage for the duration of your active subscription. Hulu + Live TV offers unlimited DVR storage (and has a cool option to skip ads within those recordings).

To test ESPN Select's streaming performance, we watched a live NCAA Men's matchup between the Fort Wayne Ants and Long Island Nets over a home Ethernet connection (200Mbps download). The video didn't buffer, and the audio sounded clear. We streamed an episode of Peyton's Places without issues over a mobile device's Wi-Fi connection.

Accessibility and Parental Controls

ESPN Select included closed captions on every live and on-demand program we watched. You can customize the background and foreground, as well as the window's colors and opacity. You can also adjust the font size and type.

The service lacks parental controls, which is to be expected given the nature of its content. None of the service's shows even lists parental ratings. Most on-demand video streaming services, including Disney+ and HBO Max, let parents restrict individual profiles from viewing content above a specific parental rating. Sling TV is the rare live TV streaming service that offers parental control tools.

Can You Watch ESPN Select With a VPN?

A VPN can help you protect your privacy online and spoof your location. Many video streaming services attempt to block VPN traffic in order to enforce regional streaming restrictions. ESPN Select, for its part, is not available outside the US, so it would have a reason to prevent you from streaming over a VPN connection.

During testing, we connected a desktop and mobile device to US-based Mullvad VPN servers, and ESPN blocked access on both platforms. Even if your VPN and video streaming service work together without issues, they may not do so in the future. We recommend choosing a VPN based on other factors, such as its value, privacy stances, and security features.

Final Thoughts

ESPN Select - Software & Service (Credit: ESPN)

ESPN Select

3.5 Good

ESPN Select allows you to stream live sports and archived ESPN shows, but it restricts access to the channel's flagship programming to pricier tiers.

About Our Experts

Jordan Minor

Jordan Minor

Principal Writer, Software

My PCMag career began in 2013 as an intern. Now, I'm a senior writer, using the skills I acquired at Northwestern University to write about dating apps, meal kits, programming software, website builders, video streaming services, and video games. I was previously a senior editor at Geek.com and have written for The A.V. Club, Kotaku, and Paste Magazine. I'm the author of the gaming history book Video Game of the Year: A Year-by-Year Guide to the Best, Boldest, and Most Bizarre Games from Every Year Since 1977, and the reason everything you know about Street Sharks is a lie.

The Technology I Use

I use the newest Android and iOS smartphones for testing, but I currently use an iPhone 14 as my personal phone. I just hate that we gave up headphone jacks.

I've always favored gaming laptops over desktops. On that note, I have a 16-inch HP Envy with an Intel Core i9-13900H CPU and Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 GPU. No matter what machine I’m working on, an alarming amount of my personal and professional life revolves around cloud-synced Google Drive files.

For food subscriptions, my household sticks with CookUnity and HelloFresh for meals. Video streaming is a bit more complicated. While there are too many services to list, we're subscribed to most of the major ones. These days, I find myself drawn to HBO Max's movies and shows, as well as Peacock's reality trash.

I've been a lifelong Nintendo fan, and I sincerely believe the Nintendo Switch will go down as one of the best gaming consoles of all time. It has an unbelievable library of new and old games from Nintendo and third-party companies. The handheld/console hybrid approach makes playing games so much more flexible, a legacy that continues with the Nintendo Switch 2 and Valve’s Steam Deck.

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Ben Moore

Ben Moore

Managing Editor, Software

My Experience

I’ve been writing and editing technology articles for more than seven years, most recently as part of PCMag's software team. I am responsible for content in the AI, financial, graphic design, operating system, photo and video editing, productivity, and small business categories, among others. I also worked for several years on the consumer electronics team, where I edited articles on topics such as cameras, headphones, phones, speakers, and tablets. Before PCMag, I was at Neowin.net, Tom’s Guide, and Laptop Mag.

The Technology I Use

I use a Lenovo ThinkPad P14s for work and a 2021 Razer Blade 14 for everything else. I also keep a Lenovo Yoga Tab tablet and a HiBy M300 digital audio player. My current phone is a Google Pixel 9a.

As for software, I use Firefox everywhere, as well as Bitwarden and Mullvad VPN. I rely on Adobe Lightroom to edit photos and Google Keep or Microsoft Excel to manage the rest of my life. To organize my music library, I use MusicBee on Windows and Musicolet on Android.

I’m currently split between wired and wireless headphones. I use a Fiio K3 amp/DAC for the Beyerdynamic DT 700 Pro X headphones and the Moondrop Kato earphones. For wireless audio, I switch between the Shure Aonic 50 (Gen 2) headphones and the Technics EAH-AZ40M2 earphones.

My current camera is a Nikon Z6III.

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