Greyhound Racing on TV: RPGTV, Sky Sports & Freeview

Where to watch greyhound racing on TV in the UK. RPGTV schedules, Sky Sports coverage, and free-to-air options for following the dogs.


Updated: May 2026

Television screen showing live RPGTV greyhound racing broadcast in a UK living room

Best Greyhound Betting Sites – Bet on Greyhounds in 2026

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Finding the Dogs on Screen

Greyhound racing’s television presence is smaller than horse racing’s but more accessible than most casual viewers realise. Between dedicated channels, bookmaker streaming services, and occasional mainstream coverage of major events, there’s no shortage of ways to watch UK greyhound racing from your living room, your phone, or your laptop. The challenge isn’t finding coverage — it’s knowing where to look and which source suits your needs.

If you’re a punter, watching races isn’t just entertainment. It’s data collection. Seeing how a dog runs — how it breaks, handles the bends, responds to pressure — provides information that form figures alone can’t capture. Building a regular viewing habit around greyhound racing sharpens your race reading in ways that translate directly into better betting decisions.

RPGTV: The Dedicated Greyhound Channel

Racing Post Greyhound TV is the UK’s dedicated greyhound racing channel. It broadcasts live from tracks across the country, covering a mix of BAGS and Premier meetings with professional commentary, pre-race analysis, and post-race discussion. RPGTV is available free-to-view on Sky channel 427 (via Sporty Stuff), FreeSat channel 250, and can also be streamed online at SportyStuff.tv (Greyhound Racing Ireland — RPGTV Channel Info).

The quality of coverage is significantly better than what you’ll get from a bookmaker’s streaming feed. Commentators are specialists who know the dogs, the trainers, and the tracks. Pre-race analysis often includes insights that aren’t available from form data alone — observations about a dog’s condition in the parade, the state of the track surface, or a trainer’s comments about their runner’s preparation. For serious greyhound punters, RPGTV is the closest thing to being trackside without leaving the house.

The schedule covers multiple meetings per day, with priority given to the highest-profile fixtures. Evening Premier meetings receive the fullest treatment, with extended pre-race coverage and post-race analysis. Daytime BAGS coverage is typically more streamlined — commentary and basic analysis without the deeper studio discussion. Not every meeting is covered; RPGTV selects from the available fixtures based on quality and viewer interest.

Access to RPGTV through Sky does not require a sports or racing package — it is a free-to-view channel available on the basic Sky subscription. For non-Sky households, RPGTV content can be streamed online at SportyStuff.tv, and the channel is also available on FreeSat.

Sky Sports and ITV Coverage

Mainstream television coverage of greyhound racing is limited compared to horse racing. Sky Sports covers selected major events — the English Greyhound Derby, the St Leger, and occasionally other Category One competitions — but does not carry regular weekly greyhound racing. When Sky does cover a greyhound event, the production quality is high, with studio presentation, expert analysis, and the kind of broadcast infrastructure that elevates the viewing experience beyond what RPGTV can offer with its smaller budget.

The Derby final, in particular, receives prominent Sky Sports coverage in late June. This is the one greyhound race that reliably reaches a mainstream television audience, and the coverage reflects that — interviews with trainers, background features on the finalists, and extended build-up that treats the event with the significance it deserves. For punters, the Derby coverage is useful both for its analytical content and for its effect on the betting market. Races shown on Sky attract more betting volume, which generally makes the market more liquid and the odds more accurate.

ITV does not carry regular greyhound racing and has not done so for many years. Occasional one-off documentaries or features about the sport appear on ITV or Channel 4, but these are editorial rather than live racing broadcasts. The BBC’s relationship with greyhound racing is similarly distant — no live coverage and only sporadic documentary interest.

The practical reality is that if you want to watch greyhound racing regularly on television in 2026, your options are RPGTV on Sky or bookmaker streaming services online. Mainstream terrestrial or free-to-air coverage of the sport is effectively non-existent outside of the very biggest events.

Freeview and Online Alternatives

Greyhound racing has had some availability on Freeview through the Sporty Stuff channel, though availability may vary by area and schedule changes. The most reliable free options for watching live greyhound racing beyond Sky and FreeSat are online streaming services.

Online, the picture is considerably better. Every major UK bookmaker offers live streaming of greyhound fixtures through their website and app. Bet365 provides the most comprehensive coverage, streaming virtually every UK greyhound meeting — BAGS and Premier alike — to customers with a funded account. The stream is available on desktop, mobile, and tablet, and the quality is sufficient for race-watching purposes even if it’s not television-standard.

Other bookmakers — William Hill, Coral, Ladbrokes, Paddy Power, Betfair — offer similar streaming coverage with varying degrees of comprehensiveness. Some stream only the meetings they have betting markets for; others cover the full UK fixture list. Access requirements differ: some require a funded account, others require a bet placed within the last 24 hours, and a few offer unrestricted streaming to all registered customers.

YouTube and social media channels occasionally carry greyhound racing content — highlights, replays, and promotional clips from tracks and bookmakers. This content is not live and not comprehensive, but it can be useful for catching up on races you missed or for previewing dogs you haven’t seen run before. Some tracks maintain their own YouTube channels with race replays from recent meetings.

Race replays are available through Timeform, Racing Post, and several bookmaker websites. These aren’t live, but they’re valuable for analysis. If you’re reviewing a dog’s recent form and want to see how it actually ran — rather than relying solely on the form figures and running comments — replays provide the visual evidence. Many experienced punters watch replays of the previous meeting at a track before betting on the next card, using the footage to calibrate their understanding of the track conditions and the runners’ current form.

Matching Broadcasts to Betting Opportunities

Watching greyhound racing on television or through streaming isn’t just a viewing choice — it’s an analytical one. The meetings you watch should ideally align with the meetings you bet on. Building visual knowledge of dogs, tracks, and conditions at the venues where you place your money creates a compound advantage that no amount of form reading can replicate.

If you bet primarily on one or two tracks, make a habit of watching those tracks’ meetings live. Over weeks and months, you’ll start to recognise individual dogs, notice how certain traps run at different times of year, and develop intuitions about race dynamics that are informed by observation rather than data alone. This accumulated visual knowledge is one of the strongest edges available to a dedicated greyhound punter.

For major events and competitions, watching every round is essential if you plan to bet on later stages. The heats of the Derby, the St Leger, or regional competitions produce information that the form figures capture only partially. How a dog won its heat — comfortably or under pressure, from the front or from behind, with clean running or after trouble — shapes your assessment of its chances in the semi-final and final. Punters who watch every round of a competition have a demonstrably better understanding of the finalists than those who only check the results.

The investment is time rather than money. An evening meeting takes about three hours. A BAGS meeting during the day takes about the same. Watching two or three meetings per week, focused on the tracks you bet on, is enough to build meaningful visual knowledge within a few months. That knowledge doesn’t expire or reset — it accumulates, and it gives you a perspective that pure form analysts simply don’t have.