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Find out how to watch the games live and free from Australia

The countdown is on until the 2026 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow. While this major multi-sport spectacle may not be on the same level as the Olympics, it's still one of the best opportunities Australia's top athletes have to compete on the world stage.
Known as the “Friendly Games”, this year's event will bring together more than 3,000 athletes from 74 Commonwealth nations across ten sports, with para-sports incorporated into the main program. Here’s everything you need to know about the 2026 Commonwealth Games.
After Victoria pulled out due to major funding issues, Glasgow – Scotland's largest city – took over as the official host of the 2026 Commonwealth Games. This year's scaled-back event will feature ten days of competition, kicking off with the Opening Ceremony on Thursday, July 23 and ending with the Closing Ceremony on Sunday, August 2.
You can watch the Commonwealth Games 2026 live and free in Australia on the Seven Network and its digital streaming platform, 7plus.
The 2026 Commonwealth Games will feature ten sports, which is half the 20 initially planned for Victoria. Athletics and swimming were the only compulsory events on the program, which now also includes 3x3 basketball, lawn bowls, track cycling and weightlifting – all of which have a para-event counterpart. Artistic gymnastics, boxing, judo and netball round out the final ten.
Popular sports, including cricket, rugby sevens, table tennis, hockey, badminton and beach volleyball, have all been left off the 2026 program.
The first Australian athletes for Glasgow 2026 were selected in April, including Olympic pole vault champion Nina Kennedy, high jump silver medalist Nicola Olyslagers, 800-metre track star Peter Bol and sprinter Lachlan Kennedy. Australia has also announced a six-strong para powerlifting team, along with its lawn bowls squad.
Just like the Olympics, the Commonwealth Games are held every four years. Since the inaugural event in 1930, the Games have been hosted in Australia four times, including Sydney in 1938, Perth in 1962, Brisbane in 1982, Melbourne in 2006 and the Gold Coast in 2018.
Unlike the Olympics, the Commonwealth Games only features athletes from Commonwealth nations or member states, including Australia, the UK, Canada, India, Scotland, Singapore, Jamaica and South Africa. While the Commonwealth of Nations consists of 56 countries, the Games also include several territories and dependencies, bringing the total to around 74 competing associations.
In April 2022, it was announced that regional Victoria would host the 2026 Commonwealth Games across four hubs in Geelong, Bendigo, Ballarat and Gippsland. The Games were expected to inject more than $3 billion into Victoria’s economy and generate thousands of full-time jobs. However, in July 2023, former Victorian premier Daniel Andrews revealed the predicted cost of the 12-day event had blown out from $2.6 billion to more than $7 billion, resulting in regional Victoria withdrawing as the 2026 host.
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