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The Winter Olympics are officially underway, and if you’re trying to catch as much of the games as you can over the next two weeks, there’s only one streaming subscription you need. Of course, we’re talking about the official streaming home of the Olympic Games: Peacock.
See the latest movies, shows and sports arriving each month on Peacock. Plus find out current pricing, plans and free trials. Updated monthly.
The 2026 Winter Olympics are underway, and the best comprehensive event coverage is exclusive to Peacock, the premium streaming service from NBC. That means event-by-event dedicated streams for Olympic snowboarding, curling, hockey and more that you can’t get on cable TV.
Catch every event, competition, and medal ceremony live without paying a cent.
NBCUniversal owns the U.S. media rights to the Olympic Games through 2036, which are scheduled for Milan Cortina (2026), Los Angeles (2028), French Alps (2030), Brisbane (2032), Utah (2034), and the 2036 Summer Games. Click here for more information on how to watch the Milan Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games.
That once-every-two-years Olympics dilemma is happening again: there are so many sports and so little time, especially with events overlapping. After all, they must fit over 116 medal events into just over two weeks.
If you're signing up to Peacock to stream Super Bowl LX or the 2026 Winter Olympics, here are the three shows to stream before your subscription expires.
If you're eligible, you can snag a free subscription just in time for Super Bowl 2026, NBA All-Star Game and Winter Olympics.
Peacock is preparing for its monthly drop of new series and movies. Here is everything coming throughout February 2026.
Stumble will be back on screens later this month. The next episode of the mockumentary series will air on NBC on Friday, Feb. 20, and stream the following day on Peacock. Episode 10, Finals Week, premieres on NBC on Feb. 20 at 10:30 p.m. ET/10:30 p.m. PT. Streams on Peacock on Feb. 21.
Italian President Sergio Mattarella declared the 2026 Winter Olympics open. Two cauldrons — one in Milan and one in Cortina — have been lit, marking a first in the Winter Games’ history. Hello everyone from Cortina d'Ampezzo - a 4.