College basketball runs from November tip-offs to One Shining Moment in early April, and it saves its madness for the end. During the regular season you get weeknight conference doubleheaders and Saturday slates on ESPN, CBS, FOX, the Big Ten and SEC Networks, FS1 and TBS - a manageable rhythm. Then March arrives and the sport explodes into dozens of simultaneous games, which is exactly when a single page listing every live matchup becomes essential.
This hub covers the whole calendar: non-conference November and December matchups and holiday tournaments, the January-February conference grind, the conference tournaments in early March, and then the NCAA Tournament itself - First Four, Round of 64, Round of 32, Sweet 16, Elite Eight, Final Four, and the National Championship. During the tournament's opening Thursday and Friday, tip-offs overlap almost continuously from about 12:15 PM ET into the night, and this is the one time of year where having every game and a quick backup feed genuinely changes your viewing day. Buzzer-beaters do not wait for a stream to rebuffer, so the channel tabs matter.
Rivalry games carry the biggest crowds and the deepest set of sources - Duke-North Carolina, Kentucky-Kansas, the Big East battles at Madison Square Garden - and tournament games ramp up further as the field narrows toward the Final Four. If you also follow the pros, the same players you are watching now show up later on our NBA streams page, and college football fans can cross over to NCAAF streams in the fall.
New games are added as tip-off approaches and feeds usually come online 30 to 60 minutes beforehand. During March Madness the schedule turns over quickly, so refresh the list as games finish and new ones start. TheTVApp is a free aggregator that hosts no video of its own; every stream is a third-party link embedded here for convenience.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the entire NCAA Tournament (March Madness) covered?
Yes - the First Four, Round of 64, Round of 32, Sweet 16, Elite Eight, Final Four, and the National Championship. Tournament games carry the most backup channels because viewership peaks in March.
How do I keep up when many March Madness games overlap?
Every live game is in one list, so you can switch between them quickly, and you can open a second in a new tab. Refresh the page as games end and new tip-offs begin during the tournament.
What networks normally carry college basketball games?
Regular-season games run on ESPN, CBS, FOX, FS1, TBS and the Big Ten/SEC/ACC networks; the NCAA Tournament is split across CBS, TBS, TNT and truTV. You do not need those subscriptions here.
When does the college basketball season start?
The season tips off in early November with non-conference play and holiday tournaments, moves into conference play in January, and builds to the conference tournaments and March Madness in March and early April.