If you’re abroad and want to watch NFL games, live or later, the best option is to pay for it: NFL Game Pass is the official service that allows you to stream games from outside the United States. It’s ideal for football fans who live outside the US or are traveling. Here are the details about Game Pass and some of my experiences using it over the years.
Of course, you may be able to stream NFL games from some dodgy website (as I once did for the Super Bowl in Thailand) but it can be unreliable and irritating. Or you could carefully avoid the score and secretly download the entire game hours or days later – but this can be just as annoying. And, certain games never get uploaded anyway.
A 25% discount for Game Pass in 2019
The NFL has never been able to decide what it wants to offer for Game Pass, and the options change wildly from season to season. In 2018, they brought back the option to watch only one team all season. It was cheaper and the perfect choice for someone who just wants their team’s games.
That has been (yet again) done away with for the 2019 season. If you used the single-team option in 2018 though, you may have some good news. At least, I did: I got an email from NFL explaining that since the single-team option was no longer available, I’d have to buy the “everything” super package, the only one available. It includes all 256 regular-season games plus the post-season and Super Bowl. As an “apology” they offered a voucher code good for 25% off the high “Season Pro” price. I took it.
I’d prefer the single-team only option, but it comes and goes and there’s nothing you can do. Still, with the 25% voucher, the price isn’t too bad considering the postseason and the Super Bowl are included, and when they’re not I usually buy them anyway. The price was reduced from $240 to $180.
If you were a customer last year and the package you bought isn’t available, check to see if you’re eligible for the discount. They sent me mine in an unexpected email, so check your own inbox.
I first began using NFL Game Pass to stream games from my team (Atlanta Falcons) whilst living in Japan several years ago. (I still live in Japan, and I still use Game Pass.)
I also used NFL Game Pass while traveling through Europe during the 2014 season. It worked excellently in every country I was in. On NFL Game Pass, the video stream is crisp and fast, the controls work well (except when they don’t – see below) and you can watch games live or start them anytime you want.
NFL Game Pass is only available to people physically outside the United States; the service detects where you are to make sure. I believe there is now a Game Pass app for phones, but I’ve never used it. I just stream them on my laptop.
Read on to see my experiences with NFL Game Pass, especially when I was trekking through Europe and I never missed a game.
NFL Game Pass: Pros
- You can watch a game any time. Watch live if your schedule permits, or start at the beginning if the game is already underway or has finished.
- The controls are good. Left and right arrow keys skip a few seconds behind or forward (nice for your own instant replay). You can automatically jump to key plays or choose other audio broadcasts to listen to. The controls disappear after a few seconds so you can see the whole screen with a minimum of clutter.
- The scores are hidden on all Game Pass web pages. Safely go to the website and log in; you can only see if a game is final or not. No scores are shown, though there is an option to show them if you want (you have to be logged in). Remember this is the Game Pass website only, which in 2019 is now at nflgamepass.com; the home NFL website does show scores. Also, these games are the regular network broadcasts, so scores from other games may be mentioned on-screen in the crawl. Avoiding scores: it’s a game all itself.
- The video is high-quality. Unless your connection is slow, then it goes to a lower-res version. But it always bounces back, or attempts to.
- No commercials. The TV commercials are present in live or recently-finished games, but for games that finished a few hours ago commercials are neatly excised and you can watch the game straight through without interruption. It’s almost worth waiting for, if you despise commercials as much as I do.
NFL Game Pass: Cons
- Starting a game that’s already underway. If you start a stream during a game – say, the second quarter is happening live right now – you’ll jump immediately to the current point in the game. If you don’t want to know the score yet, you have to take precautions to not spoil it. I mute my computer, shield as much of the screen as I can with my hand and arm, and move the slider at the bottom back to the start of the game. Then it’s ok. But be careful.
- Too-wide screen. I have had problems in the past, for several seasons, with the video window accidentally getting too wide and going beyond my screen. This meant I couldn’t use the controls to go full-screen. I haven’t seen this problem since 2017; maybe they finally fixed it. (This was on desktop; I’ve never used Game Pass on my phone.)
- Commercials. During live or recently-finished games, you do have to sit through the regular network commercials. Skipping ahead 10 seconds gets through them but that feature isn’t lightning fast, because you eventually hit the limit of the cache. The commercials are often for American products and TV shows that, by nature, Game Pass viewers wouldn’t be interested in or have access to anyway.
Example: An NFL Game Pass Season Abroad
When the 2014 NFL season began I was living in Osaka, Japan. That October I headed to Sweden to begin a long backtracking trek down through Europe, with my laptop. This is the list of where I watched each of the Atlanta Falcons’ games that year. (Most games were watched within a few hours after they’d actually begun. Few were actually live, thanks to time differences and being busy sightseeing.)
Week 1: New Orleans vs Atlanta — OSAKA, JAPAN
Week 2: Atlanta vs Cincinnati — OSAKA, JAPAN
Week 3: Tampa Bay vs Atlanta — OSAKA, JAPAN
Week 4: Atlanta vs Minnesota — OSAKA, JAPAN
Week 5: Atlanta vs New York Giants — OSAKA, JAPAN
Week 6: Chicago vs Atlanta — OSAKA, JAPAN
Week 7: Atlanta vs Baltimore — MARIEHAMN, ÅLAND
Week 8: Detroit vs Atlanta — VALKA, LATVIA
Week 9: Bye
Week 10: Atlanta vs. Tampa Bay – WARSAW, POLAND
Week 11: Atlanta vs. Carolina – KRAKOW, POLAND
Week 12: Cleveland vs. Atlanta – PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC
Week 13: Arizona vs. Atlanta – BRATISLAVA, SLOVAKIA
• I watched this game live as it happened, late at night in Bratislava. Sometimes the timing works out like that.
Week 14: Atlanta vs. Green Bay – BUDAPEST, HUNGARY
Week 15: Pittsburgh vs. Atlanta – PTUJ, SLOVENIA
Week 16: Atlanta vs. New Orleans – PIRAN, SLOVENIA
Week 17: Carolina vs. Atlanta – VARAŽDIN, CROATIA
Super Bowl XLIX (New England vs. Seattle) – TIRANA, ALBANIA
• I paid an extra $10 just for this game, which I watched live from 12:30 to 4:00 am local time.
All in all, NFL Game Pass proves itself useful and reliable for watching games while outside the United States. The ease of use makes the price worth it, if you don’t want to miss anything during the season.
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I got a canadian game pass account. Will I be able to watch monday night football November 21st while ill be in Paris ? Cuz normally monday night are black-out in my country but ill be in Europe November 21st. Will it work? Will the app know ill not be in my country? Thx
I believe it will be fine. MNF must be blacked out because of broadcast rights but Game Pass says it includes *every* game, no matter what TV station it’s on. I have a single Game Pass account and it has always worked in multiple countries when I travel.
Let me know if it works in Paris. Good luck 🙂
Hey Jeremy, thanks for creating this informative and inspiring blog! I found it while researching NFL broadcasting rules for overseas, but was moved by your personal testimony about living with diabetes. I did donate $100 to diabetes research as a result (not JDRF, but the Kilo Foundation). Thanks for your courage and stay healthy!
Ron,
Thanks a lot! Glad you came by and liked the site 🙂
Jeremy
Jeremy. Very helpful. Should I wait until I am in Japan to download game pass or can I do it from the US?
Mike,
I watch Game Pass on my laptop, and there is nothing to download. Just stream through a browser. I believe that you have to be outside the US (as reckoned when you visit nfl.com) to sign up and pay for GP, so doing it abroad is probably the only option.
Enjoy! Thanks for reading.
Jeremy
Thanks for the article. I’m going to the Philippines in November but live in Denver. I wanna catch the games while I’m gone for 3 weeks. If I purchase game pass in the states will it recognize when I’ve changed locations? Or is there any chance that the bronocs games will be blacked out? I don’t mind not being able to see them live. As long as I get to see them.
They’ll remember you on any device; you just log in. And no there are no black outs on Game Pass!
AS OF 2019 there are some blackouts in the United Kingdom for certain games. Check the Game Pass website for details.
So I have a GamePass account. I usually watch the Preseason games live, and then the replays of games during the season since I can see them on TV here in the USA. I will be overseas when the season starts. So if I just log into GamePass like I normally do, it will know I am not in the US anymore and show me the overseas option to watch the game as it is happening? (I do not want to wait until it is over, like I do here in the US)
Yes I believe that is the case.
I am confused. Can I watch an entire game live if in Germany with game pass, or do I have to wait for it to be over or partially over? Also, do I have to purchase in Europe to use game pass in Europe? I bought in Mpls (Vikings) just before I left for Germany.
I think you can watch the game live from the moment it starts. And I’m pretty sure it doesn’t matter where you were when you bought it, you can log in anywhere valid and watch it.
Hi,
i live in Greece, will i be able to watch live all the games with game pass here? The cable tv that was connected with Fox Sports is no longer available in Greece, so i search for a way to watch 2020 – 2021 season live.
Best,
Babis