LiveTV Guide

Privacy Policy

This privacy policy describes how LiveTV Guide collects, uses and discloses information when you visit our website. We aim to collect as little personal data as practical for an editorial publication.

What we collect

Server access logs. Our hosting provider records the IP address of incoming requests, the user-agent string of the browser, the URL requested, the HTTP referer header, and the timestamp. These logs are retained for 30 days and are used to detect security issues, identify abusive traffic, and produce aggregate traffic statistics.

Analytics. We use Google Analytics 4 to measure aggregate site traffic. The Google Analytics cookies record a randomly-generated client identifier, the pages you visit, the time spent on each page, and broad geographic and device information. The data is not used to identify individual users. You can opt out by installing the official Google Analytics opt-out browser add-on, or by setting your browser to block cookies from googletagmanager.com.

Embedded fixture widget. The football pages on this site embed a fixture widget served from api.tfw.bz. The widget makes a network request from your browser to api.tfw.bz when the page loads. The api.tfw.bz operator may log the IP address and user-agent of incoming widget requests for normal server operation. The widget does not set any cookies on this domain.

What we do not collect

We do not require registration or accounts. We do not collect names, email addresses, phone numbers, or payment information. We do not place advertising cookies. We do not sell or share data with third-party advertisers or data brokers. There is no contact form that captures personal information beyond the email addresses you choose to share when contacting us directly.

Cookies

We set the following cookies:

  • Google Analytics (_ga, _ga_*, _gid): client-side analytics tracking. Lifetime: up to 24 months. Can be blocked by browser settings or the Google opt-out plugin.

No advertising, retargeting, or social-media tracking cookies are set on this site.

Your rights under GDPR (EU/UK visitors)

Under the GDPR and the UK Data Protection Act, you have the right to:

  • Request a copy of the personal data we hold about you
  • Request correction of inaccurate personal data
  • Request deletion of your personal data (“right to be forgotten”)
  • Object to processing of your personal data
  • Withdraw consent for any processing based on consent

For an editorial site that does not maintain user accounts, the personal data we hold is limited to server log entries that include your IP address. These are deleted after 30 days as part of normal log rotation. To request a copy or deletion of any personal data we may hold, email [email protected] with a description of the request.

Your rights under CCPA (California visitors)

Under the California Consumer Privacy Act, California residents have the right to know what categories of personal information are collected, the right to request deletion, and the right to opt out of any sale of personal information. We do not sell personal information.

Contact

Privacy enquiries: [email protected] This policy was last reviewed: 17 May 2026.

Frequently asked questions

Which broadcaster shows the most live sports in 2025/26?
No single broadcaster carries everything. ESPN+ and Peacock anchor most U.S. football and league coverage; Paramount+ holds UEFA Champions League and Serie A; Apple TV has the exclusive MLS Season Pass deal; Amazon Prime Video carries Thursday Night Football. Each sport’s landing page on this site names the official rights-holder for the current season.
Can major sports be watched legally for free?
Free-to-air coverage in the U.S. is limited to over-the-air NFL games on the major networks (CBS, FOX, NBC, ABC) and select championship events. Almost everything else — Premier League, Champions League, NBA League Pass, MLB — requires a paid subscription. Peacock and Paramount+ offer the lowest entry tiers; YouTube TV and Hulu + Live TV bundle the regional sports networks.
What is the cheapest way to watch the Premier League in the United States?
The U.S. Premier League rights belong to NBC through 2028. The cheapest legal access is Peacock Premium at $7.99/month, which carries most Saturday/Sunday matches not on NBC or USA Network. There is no free legal stream. The Peacock app is also where any Premier League game not selected by the linear NBC broadcast lives.
Does LiveTV Guide host any streams?
No. LiveTV Guide is strictly editorial — we publish kickoff times, official broadcaster names and subscription details. We never host, embed, link to or describe how to access unauthorised streams. For copyright concerns write to [email protected].