A New Era for AFCON on UK Television

For the first time, the Africa Cup of Nations will be shown exclusively on free-to-air television in the UK, after Channel 4 secured the full rights to broadcast every match of AFCON 2025.
It is a deal that carries weight far beyond programming schedules. It signals a shift in both the visibility of African football and the willingness of UK broadcasters to treat AFCON as a major global sporting event.

In turn, Channel 4 confirmed it will deliver coverage across linear channels and digital platforms, offering full live matches, highlights and supporting content. It is an important moment for the tournament’s relationship with British audiences, many of whom follow Premier League stars whose national team stories often remain underreported.

As Channel 4’s Head of Sport Pete Andrews who has really changed sport for the greater good at C4 said. “Bringing every match live to free-to-air TV ensures fans can enjoy world-class football from across Africa” a statement that reflects both ambition and recognition of a growing audience.

What This Means for AFCON and African Football Culture

For years, AFCON has lived in a fragmented space in the UK: admired by devoted followers, yet inconsistently broadcast and rarely given the platform it deserves. Channel 4’s move changes that dynamic.

Greater visibility for African football identity

AFCON’s identity is rooted in atmosphere, rhythm and narrative. The tournament carries the emotional weight of communities across North, West, East, Central and Southern Africa. A free-to-air broadcast gives these stories a far larger stage.

A cultural bridge for British-African communities

The UK is home to sizeable Nigerian, Ghanaian, Senegalese, Moroccan, Somali, Algerian, Congolese and Ivorian communities. AFCON is central to their football identity. This deal recognises that audience and brings the tournament’s richness into mainstream discussion.

A lift for players whose club careers overshadow their national roles

Stars like Mohamed Salah, Victor Osimhen, Mohamed Kudus, Andre Onana and Riyad Mahrez are household Premier League and Champions League names, yet their national team stories often sit outside UK coverage.
AFCON 2025 will correct that imbalance, allowing fans to follow these players in a setting where they often feel most connected and most responsible.

Why Channel 4 Moved Now

Similarly, the timing reflects both strategic opportunity and a shifting football landscape.

AFCON’s rising global status

The 2023 edition broke broadcast records across Africa and the Middle East. Competitive balance has improved, tactical systems have evolved, and the overall footballing level has risen sharply.

Premier League influence

With so many African players now central to elite English clubs, AFCON is no longer a peripheral event for UK fans. Clubs, supporters and analysts follow it closely for talent, scouting and narrative.

Channel 4’s sports strategy

After investing in England football, Formula 1 highlights and high-profile documentaries, Channel 4 is building a portfolio of cultural and accessible sport. AFCON fits that strategy perfectly: global significance, passionate following, elite-quality matches, and unique storytelling. Which is why Striver.Football is doing the same!

What UK Viewers Can Expect

Channel 4 will broadcast all 52 matches, including:

  • Full live coverage
  • Highlights and digital clips
  • Analysis shows
  • Multi-platform streaming

Furthermore, the network has hinted at more expansive production, with behind-the-scenes access and greater integration of African voices and perspectives. If delivered well, this could become the most immersive AFCON broadcast ever shown in the UK.

The Stakes for AFCON 2025

The 2025 tournament, hosted in Morocco, already promises one of the strongest fields in recent memory. Heavyweights like Senegal, Egypt, Ivory Coast, Zimbabwe, Morocco and Nigeria are entering a generational transition. Several nations are nurturing exciting young groups capable of reshaping the competitive balance.

Ultimately, with Channel 4 providing full visibility, this AFCON moves beyond the boundaries of a continental tournament and becomes a shared cultural moment within British football.

And for the players, it offers something rare: the chance to define themselves on their own stage, free from the framing of club football.

The Bigger Picture: A Step Towards Mainstream Recognition

This broadcasting deal may prove a turning point.
If AFCON thrives with a UK audience—and it will—it strengthens the argument that African football deserves year-round coverage, deeper storytelling and a presence in mainstream analysis.

Channel 4 has made a statement.
Now it has the opportunity to set a new standard for how African football is presented.

AFCON 2025 will not just be watched. It will be understood.