NFL Sunday Ticket starts at $12 per month for four months for eligible new users, while returning users pay $15.50 per month.
If you just want the clean answer, the monthly price for NFL Sunday Ticket depends on which offer you qualify for and whether you buy it through YouTube by itself or pair it with YouTube TV. For many buyers, the headline number is either $12 per month for four months or $15.50 per month for four months.
That sounds simple. The catch is that “per month” can mean two different things here. One is a season payment split into installments. The other is a true month-to-month plan, which works more like a regular subscription and lets you stop after a billing cycle. Those are not the same thing, and mixing them up is where most of the confusion starts.
How Much Is Sunday Ticket Per Month? With Current Offers
Right now, the lowest advertised monthly price tied to a full season pass is for eligible new users. That offer breaks the season cost into four monthly payments of $12. Returning users see a higher installment price of $15.50 per month for four months.
You can buy Sunday Ticket as a standalone package on YouTube, or you can add it to a YouTube TV base plan. The Sunday Ticket installment amount stays the same either way for the common new-user and returning-user offers. The part that changes is your total monthly spend once the YouTube TV base plan is added.
If you want the most games in one place, the bundle has the wider reach because the base plan covers local and national broadcasts while Sunday Ticket covers out-of-market Sunday afternoon games. If you only care about out-of-market Sunday games, the standalone path is often the cheaper one.
Sunday Ticket Monthly Cost By Plan Type
There are three buckets to think about before you pull the trigger:
- Season pass in installments: You commit to the season, but pay it in monthly chunks.
- True month-to-month: You pay by billing cycle and can stop before the next charge.
- Discounted plans: Student and some verified worker-group offers can cut the total cost, though not always with monthly billing.
The season-pass installment plan is what most shoppers see first. It feels like a monthly price, but it is still a season commitment. Once you start, the remaining payments keep coming on schedule, and there are no refunds for the season purchase.
The true month-to-month plan is different. It gives access for one billing period at a time. That matters if you are joining late in the season or only care about a shorter stretch of games. Still, this option is not always live at the same time as the season-pass offers, so availability matters.
Official purchase pages also say installment plans are not available everywhere. A few states only get the lump-sum choice, so your address can affect what shows up at checkout.
What You Actually Pay Each Month
The figures below make the pricing easier to compare without digging through checkout screens.
| Plan Type | Monthly Price | What That Means |
|---|---|---|
| New user season pass | $12/mo for 4 months | Installments for a $48 season total |
| Returning user season pass | $15.50/mo for 4 months | Installments for a $62 season total |
| Standalone on YouTube | $12 or $15.50/mo | Same season-pass pricing, no YouTube TV base plan needed |
| With YouTube TV | $12 or $15.50/mo + base plan | Add YouTube TV monthly charge on top of Sunday Ticket |
| YouTube TV base plan | $82.99/mo | Separate live TV charge when bundled |
| Student plan | No monthly plan listed | Season price is lower, but monthly payments are not offered |
| Military, teacher, medical, first responder offer | Installments may be offered | Discounted season total with checkout options tied to eligibility |
If you are buying through YouTube’s NFL Sunday Ticket pricing page, the cheapest monthly figure on the main offer page is the new-user rate. That number is real, but it is tied to a season pass, not an open-ended rolling plan.
If you add Sunday Ticket to YouTube TV, do the math on your full bill, not just the add-on line. A new user paying $12 per month for Sunday Ticket and $82.99 per month for the base plan is looking at $94.99 per month before tax during the four-payment stretch. A returning user paying $15.50 per month would be at $98.49 before tax during that same span.
That is why the standalone purchase can look better if your only goal is out-of-market Sunday afternoon games. You skip the base-plan cost and keep the football package by itself.
What The Monthly Price Includes
Sunday Ticket is built for fans trying to watch teams outside their local market. It covers regular-season Sunday afternoon games that air on CBS and FOX outside your home area. It does not turn every NFL game into a live feed inside one package.
That means local games, national windows, playoff games, and digital-only matchups follow their own broadcast paths. If you buy the standalone package, you are buying a narrower slice of the NFL schedule than many first-time shoppers expect.
The official NFL Sunday Ticket purchase options page also spells out the split between season-pass installments and the separate month-to-month choice. Read that page before buying, because it makes the no-refund and payment-commitment rules much clearer than promo cards do.
Why Some Fans Think The Price Feels Higher Than Expected
There are three common reasons:
- The quoted monthly figure only covers the Sunday Ticket portion, not YouTube TV.
- The low monthly number is tied to a promo for new users, not all buyers.
- The season installment plan looks flexible, but it is still a locked season purchase.
So when someone says they are paying “about twelve bucks a month,” that might be true for their promo rate and billing setup. It does not mean every buyer gets the same checkout.
How Discounted Plans Change The Math
Discounted offers can cut the price a lot, but they come with tighter eligibility rules.
| Discount Route | Listed Price | Billing Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Student plan | $119 per season | No monthly payment plan listed |
| Student plan + RedZone | $129 per season | One-time seasonal purchase |
| Military, teacher, medical, first responder plan | $198 per season | Installment option may appear at checkout |
| That same offer + RedZone | $240 per season | Eligibility check required |
The student plan is the cheapest path by season total, but it is not the cheapest by monthly flexibility because monthly payments are not offered there. So if your whole search is about paying less each month, the student plan does not solve that in the usual subscription sense.
There is also a verified discount for military members, veterans, first responders, medical workers, and teachers. That deal can beat the standard public price, though the total still lands above the student rate.
If your goal is just inexpensive live NFL access, it is also smart to compare Sunday Ticket with NFL+ pricing. NFL+ is much cheaper per month, but it is not a replacement for Sunday Ticket because it does not give you the same out-of-market Sunday afternoon package.
When Month-To-Month Makes Sense
A true month-to-month plan makes the most sense for late-season buyers, fantasy players who only care about part of the schedule, or fans who want a lighter hit to the card each billing cycle. You pay for one month, watch through that billing window, and can stop before the next renewal.
That said, this option is not always open at the same time as the season-pass offers. Official support pages say it becomes available closer to the start date for the season. So if you search too early, you may only see the lump sum or the installment season pass.
Best Fit By Buyer Type
- Cheapest public monthly rate: New-user season pass at $12 per month for four months.
- Cheapest overall with eligibility: Student season plan by total price.
- Best for out-of-market games only: Standalone YouTube purchase.
- Best for most live NFL coverage in one setup: Sunday Ticket plus YouTube TV base plan.
- Best for shorter commitment: True month-to-month, once it is offered for that season.
What To Check Before You Buy
Before you hit purchase, check four things: whether you are treated as a new or returning user, whether your state allows installment billing, whether you need the YouTube TV base plan, and whether a discount plan fits your status.
Also read the line about refunds and cancellation. A season pass split into monthly payments still locks you into the season balance. That point is easy to miss when all you are staring at is the monthly figure in big type.
So, how much is Sunday Ticket per month? For the standard public offers, the clean answer is $12 per month for four months for eligible new users and $15.50 per month for four months for returning users. If you add YouTube TV, stack the base-plan charge on top. If you want true month-to-month billing, wait for that option to open and read the billing rules on the purchase page before checkout.
References & Sources
- YouTube TV.“The Exclusive Home of NFL Sunday Ticket.”Shows the listed season prices, installment amounts for new and returning users, and the current YouTube TV base-plan cost.
- YouTube TV Help.“NFL Sunday Ticket Purchase Options.”Explains the difference between season-pass installments and the separate month-to-month plan, plus billing and availability limits.
- NFL Support.“How Much Does NFL+ Cost?”Provides the official NFL+ monthly price for comparison with Sunday Ticket.
