1st June, 2026
How to Watch the AFL 2026 Finals for Free – and Why Your Antenna Matters More Than Ever This September
The 2026 AFL Grand Final takes place on Saturday, 27 September at the MCG. It will be broadcast live, exclusively, and completely free on Channel 7 – no Kayo subscription, no Foxtel package, no streaming app required.
For the millions of Australians who watch the Grand Final on free-to-air television every year, this is exactly as it should be. But in 2026, there’s a complication that previous Grand Final years didn’t have – and every Melbourne household needs to know about it before September arrives.
The Issue: Melbourne’s Channel 7 Has Already Changed
On Friday, 27 February 2026, Seven completed its broadcast technology upgrade in Melbourne, removing MPEG-2 and replacing it with MPEG-4. For most households, this was seamless. For some — particularly those with older televisions or set-top boxes — this change meant losing Channel 7, with older models typically only supporting MPEG-2 now unable to receive the updated MPEG-4 signal.
If you haven’t watched Channel 7 recently and haven’t noticed any issue, this is the time to check. A household that lost Channel 7 in February and hasn’t watched it since won’t discover the problem until Grand Final day — when every antenna technician in Melbourne will be booked solid.
A quick check takes two minutes. A fix, if one is needed, can be arranged now without any urgency.
What’s Actually Free on Channel 7 During AFL Finals Season
The AFL Finals Series runs from early September through to Grand Final day on 27 September. Channel 7 broadcasts:
- All finals matches — including qualifying finals, elimination finals, semi-finals, and preliminary finals — live and free
- The AFL Grand Final — the biggest free-to-air television event in Australia, attracting 3–4 million viewers annually
- Pre and post-match coverage — including The Sunday Footy Show and special finals programming on 7mate
Kayo Sports and Foxtel broadcast AFL finals in parallel — but they are pay services. Channel 7 is the only free-to-air broadcaster with live AFL finals rights, and the Grand Final is Channel 7 exclusive.
There is genuinely no need to pay for AFL finals coverage — provided your antenna system is delivering a clear Channel 7 signal.
How to Check Your Channel 7 Reception Now
Step 1: Turn your TV to Channel 7. If the picture is clear and normal — you’re fine. Make a note to do this check once more in August before finals season begins.
Step 2: Look for these warning signs. Even if Channel 7 is displaying, check for pixelation, periodic signal dropouts, or moments where the picture freezes and then catches up. These indicate your signal is marginal — acceptable for everyday viewing but likely to deteriorate further under the elevated atmospheric interference conditions that Melbourne’s spring weather creates.
Step 3: Check whether you lost Channel 7 in February. On a TV that doesn’t support MPEG-4, channels may appear in the channel list, however the picture is black and the sound may or may not be heard. Perform a full retune through your TV settings and see if Channel 7 comes back. If it doesn’t, your TV or set-top box may not be MPEG-4 compatible.
Step 4: If in doubt, book a professional signal test. Mr Antenna’s technicians measure actual signal strength at your property using calibrated meters — not just checking whether the picture appears, but confirming the signal margin is sufficient for reliable reception through spring.
Why September Is the Worst Time to Discover a Problem
Every year, without exception, the weeks surrounding the AFL Grand Final produce a significant spike in antenna service calls. Households that haven’t had reception issues all year suddenly discover problems when the stakes are highest.
The reasons are predictable. Spring atmospheric conditions in Melbourne create temperature inversions and humidity fluctuations that affect signal quality in ways not present during winter. An antenna system that performed adequately in July may struggle in September.
Additionally, after Melbourne’s February MPEG-4 upgrade, some households may have a marginal signal that works on most days but becomes unreliable during signal-challenging weather events — which September reliably provides.
The solution is simple: get your system checked in July or August, before the finals begin.
An Mr Antenna technician will test your signal, confirm your equipment is MPEG-4 compatible, identify any system weaknesses, and fix them well before Grand Final day.
What If You Also Want to Watch the State of Origin and Winter Olympics?
2026 is an exceptional year for free-to-air sport. Before the AFL finals season, Channel 9 also carries:
- State of Origin 2026 — live on Channel 9
- 2026 Winter Olympics — live on Nine Network, free-to-air
All of it is free. All of it is on an antenna. None of it requires a streaming subscription.
Getting your antenna properly assessed once covers all of it — the Winter Olympics, State of Origin, AFL finals, and the Grand Final — in a single visit.