Toronto FC are the most-followed Canadian club in MLS, with an established US fan footprint that grew through the Sebastian Giovinco-Jozy Altidore-Michael Bradley championship era. For a US viewer, the Toronto path is identical to any MLS club — Apple TV’s MLS Season Pass covers the entire regular season, the playoffs, and Leagues Cup.
The widget pulls Toronto’s next two weeks of fixtures across MLS, Leagues Cup, the Canadian Championship, and any CONCACAF competitions when active.
MLS regular season: Apple TV’s MLS Season Pass
Every Toronto FC regular-season MLS match streams on Apple TV’s MLS Season Pass for US viewers — $14.99 a month or $99 for the full season. Canadian viewers access the same broadcast through TSN’s Direct subscription with adjusted pricing, but for a US-based Toronto supporter the Apple subscription is the standard path.
Apple’s 10-year, $2.5 billion MLS deal applies the same broadcast structure across both countries — no blackouts, no regional restrictions inside North America, full match library on demand after kickoff. The Saturday 7:30pm Eastern kickoff is the standard MLS slot. BMO Field home matches typically land in that window during the spring-through-fall MLS calendar, with weather-driven kickoff adjustments in early-season Canadian winter.
Apple Music subscribers get the MLS Season Pass discount — $12.99/month or $79/season with an active Apple Music subscription. The bundle math is one of the cleanest in US sports streaming.
MLS Cup playoffs
The MLS Cup playoffs run on the same MLS Season Pass subscription. Round One is best-of-three, with Conference Semifinals through MLS Cup running single-elimination. Toronto’s deepest playoff runs (the 2017 MLS Cup victory and the 2016 and 2019 finals) predated the Apple deal and ran on ESPN and FOX, but the current structure routes all playoff matches through MLS Season Pass.
A handful of marquee playoff matches simulcast on FOX or FS1 stateside. The simulcasts are unpredictable but typically include the MLS Cup final.
Canadian Championship: separate broadcaster
The Canadian Championship (the annual cup competition between Canadian professional clubs) streams on OneSoccer in Canada and is not part of the Apple MLS Season Pass package. For a US viewer, accessing Canadian Championship matches requires either OneSoccer’s direct subscription (geo-locked to Canada) or a regional VPN setup.
The Canadian Championship runs across spring through late summer, with the final typically in October. Toronto have multiple Canadian Championship victories. The competition’s winner qualifies for CONCACAF Champions Cup.
Leagues Cup
Leagues Cup matches (the in-season tournament between MLS and Liga MX clubs) stream on Apple TV’s MLS Season Pass. The Leagues Cup window is July through August, pausing the MLS regular season, and Apple’s broadcast covers both leagues’ fixtures during the tournament.
CONCACAF Champions Cup
CONCACAF Champions Cup rights split across FOX Sports, Univision, TUDN, Paramount+, and direct streams depending on the specific tie. Toronto’s CONCACAF runs (when they qualify via Canadian Championship victory) require match-by-match broadcaster checking. The fragmentation is a known weakness of the CONCACAF rights structure in the US.
What Toronto’s US viewing costs
A complete annual subscription for a US-based Toronto FC fan: MLS Season Pass at $99/year (or $79/year with Apple Music), with marginal additional cost for CONCACAF Champions Cup and the Canadian Championship.
Toronto fans living in the US have a meaningfully simpler subscription stack than they did pre-Apple. The MLS Season Pass approach removed the regional sports network model that had made cross-border MLS viewing complicated for years.
Pre-season and friendlies
MLS pre-season is generally not televised at scale. Toronto’s annual pre-season camps in Florida and California occasionally produce a friendly that streams on MLS Season Pass for marquee matchups, but most pre-season is private.
International friendlies at BMO Field — when Toronto host Premier League sides, Liga MX clubs, or European tour matches — typically stream on the visiting club’s broadcaster or through the venue’s direct distribution. Match-by-match in the pre-season window.
Toronto’s standing in the US Apple structure
Apple’s MLS deal does not create regional viewing tiers — Toronto is treated identically to LAFC, Inter Miami, or Atlanta United inside the broadcast. The non-blackout structure means that for the US viewer, supporting a Canadian MLS side is no harder than supporting a US-based one. The pre-Apple regional sports network model had created broadcast islands for cross-border MLS support, and Apple removed that friction.
Quick reference
- MLS regular season: Apple TV MLS Season Pass ($14.99/month or $99/season)
- MLS Cup playoffs: Same MLS Season Pass — no upcharge
- Leagues Cup: Apple TV — included in MLS Season Pass
- Canadian Championship: OneSoccer (Canada-only) — geo-locked from US
- CONCACAF Champions Cup: Varies by tie, multiple platforms
- US Open Cup: N/A — Toronto is not eligible (Canadian club)
