Out-of-market viewing shifts the strategy: NBA League Pass remains the primary option to watch all non-national Grizzlies games, with a seven-day free trial available when purchased via Prime Video. NBC or Peacock games can be covered by Peacock’s free trial or affordable Premium plans, while ESPN and ABC games can be accessed through a mix of Fubo, DirecTV Stream, YouTube TV, Hulu + Live TV, or Sling Orange on a low-cost basis. For Prime Video-exclusive games, Prime Video or Prime membership trials provide a straightforward entry point.
A streamlined “lowest price” plan is outlined for in-market viewers: subscribe to the FanDuel Sports Network channel via Prime Video for most Grizzlies games (about $29 per month total with Prime Video). For NBC/Peacock games, Peacock Premium Plus offers a free trial, or Peacock Premium as a long-term option. For ESPN/ABC games, trial-based access via Fubo, DirecTV Stream, YouTube TV, or Hulu + Live TV can keep costs down, with Sling Orange Day Pass as a minimal fallback if trials aren’t available. Prime Video-exclusive games can be addressed with Prime Video’s free trial or simply Prime Video at around $9 per month.
In total, a market-based plan can cover every Grizzlies game for as little as about $58 over two months, depending on trial timing and existing subscriptions. Out of market, a total approach centers on NBA League Pass for $50 the rest of the season, supplemented by Peacock if NBC/Peacock games appear, and a mix of streaming services (Fubo, DirecTV Stream, YouTube TV, Hulu + Live TV, or Sling) for ESPN and ABC games as needed. Free trials and regional availability can shift final pricing, but the outlined paths provide a practical, cable-free way to follow Memphis this season.