The final of the 2025 Eurovision Song Contest will go live at 9 p.m. (3 p.m. EST) on Saturday from the St. Jakobs Halle arena located in Basel, Switzerland. You can catch it from anywhere through various streaming platforms.
This event is organized by the European Broadcasting Union, which is a collective of public-service broadcasters worldwide. If you’re in the United States, you can stream the contest via Peacock since NBCUniversal owns the rights, and NBC is an associate member of the union.
In the United Kingdom, you can tune in to several BBC channels (or listen via the radio). In Italy, watch it on RAI, and in Spain, tune in to RTVE. While most members of the European Broadcasting Union are based in Europe, they are also present in countries like Israel and Algeria.
Australia has participated in Eurovision since 2015, and you can catch it on SBS. Many viewers in that music-loving nation do, even though the contest broadcasts at 5 a.m. on the Australian East Coast. If no broadcaster in your home country has the rights to air the contest, you can find the livestream on the Eurovision Song Contest channel on YouTube.
Each broadcaster provides its own commentary, and many commentators have their own loyal audiences: Graham Norton’s hilariously entertaining commentary has prompted individuals in numerous countries to use a VPN to access the BBC broadcasts. Furthermore, some regional languages are featured: SVT provides commentary in Swedish as well as in two Sámi languages in partnership with the Finnish public broadcaster, Yleisradio.
In summary, these days, accessing Eurovision is more convenient than ever, no matter your location.
Eurovision Song performances are scheduled to take place in the following sequence on Saturday:
- Norway
- Luxembourg
- Estonia
- Israel
- Lithuania
- Spain
- Ukraine
- Britain
- Austria
- Iceland
- Latvia
- Netherlands
- Finland
- Italy
- Poland
- Germany
- Greece
- Armenia
- Switzerland
- Malta
- Portugal
- Denmark
- Sweden
- France
- San Marino
- Albania.