The 2019 MotoGP season is well underway and the action has been as excitingly close to the edge as Marc Marquez's knees have been to the tarmac. You can get a MotoGP live stream using this guide so you don't miss any of the high-octane action.
The MotoGP is the motorcycle racing World Championship top level to reach with all the big name manufacturers taking part including the likes of Aprilia, Ducati, Honda, Suzuki, Yamaha and KTM. All the machines in this class top out at 1,000cc but that's more than enough power for these finely tuned monster machines, which was clear when the top speed record was set in 2018 at 221.5mph.
The 2019 MotoGP is the 71st edition of the championship which follows on from last year's event where Honda's Marc Márquez took the win after 16 races. Andrea Dovizioso finished in second and Valentino Rossi ended up in third. This year the battle is as heated as ever.
To keep up with every knee-scraping turn you can watch all the action with this guide. Read on to live stream MotoGP 2019 from anywhere you happen to be in the world.
- Pure petrol head? See how to get a F1 live stream too
How to live stream MotoGP from outside your country
To see how you can live stream the MotoGP action in the UK, Australia, the US, Canada and New Zealand, read on further down this page to see the broadcast options. But if you want to stream the riding from outside your country, you may find that it's geo-blocked.
That's where a VPN can come in really handy. It's a piece of software readily available to download and install that allows you to simulate the IP address on your laptop (or mobile phone, tablet, streaming device, console, etc) so that it appears to be in a completely different country. Ideal, assuming that it doesn't breach any Ts&Cs from the broadcaster you're trying to tune in to.
That might sound complicated, by VPNs – or Virtual Private Networks – are actually surprisingly easy to operate. Simply select one of our top three best VPN picks below (or opt straight for our number one favorite ExpressVPN), open it up and pick out your country of choice from the 'choose location' menu, and then start watching as if you were sat back at home. Easy!
The other thing that makes Express worth knowing about is the fact that it works with loads of mobile devices (Including Android and iOS) and TV streaming gizmos (so games consoles, Roku, Apple TV, Chromecast, etc), comes with 30-day money back guarantee and 3 months FREE when you sign up for an annual plan. Click here to sign up to ExpressVPN.
How to stream MotoGP live in the UK
How to watch the MotoGP in the US
- Check out the overall best sports streaming sites in the US today
How live stream the MotoGP in Australia
How to watch a MotoGP live stream in the Canada
How to get a MotoGP live stream in New Zealand
What is MotoGP?
New to the sport? Allow us to bring you up to speed (so to spoeak!):
The event has been around since 1949 making it the oldest motorsport championship in the world. The event travels the globe with nineteen races spread across fifteen countries and multiple continents. As such the nationalities of the riders are varied too, although for this class of racing all riders are over 18 years of age.
A Grand Prix event takes place over three days, with the first two of those for practice and qualification where riders need to qualify for a slot in the top-ten qualifying session by posting competitive times during any of the first three Free Practices. A second-tier qualifying then takes place with the slower riders on Saturday with the incentive of the top two making it into the top qualifying session.
You may also notice there is Moto2, for 600cc engines, and Moto3 for 250cc engines, both of which have a lower age minimum of 16, acting as a feeding line for new riders to make the mighty MotoGP when they come of age.
MotoGP calendar: Grand Prix dates for the 2019 season
- Qatar MotoGP – Losail International Circuit on March 10
- Argentina MotoGP – Autódromo Termas de Río Hondo on March 31
- American MotoGP – Circuit of the Americas, Austin on April 14
- Spanish MotoGP – Circuito de Jerez-Ángel Nieto, Jerez de la Frontera on May 5
- French MotoGP – Circuit Bugatti, Le Mans on May 19
- Italian MotoGP – Mugello Circuit, Scarperia e San Piero on June 2
- Catalonian MotoGP – Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, Montmeló on June 16
- Netherlands MotoGP – TT Circuit Assen, Assen on June 30
- German MotoGP – Sachsenring, Hohenstein-Ernstthal on July 7
- Czech Republic MotoGP – Automotodrom Brno, Brno on August 4
- Austrian MotoGP – Red Bull Ring, Spielberg on August 11
- British MotoGP – Silverstone Circuit on August 25
- San Marino MotoGP – Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli on September 15
- Aragon MotoGP – MotorLand Aragon on September 22
- Thai MotoGP – Chang International Circuit on October 6
- Japanese MotoGP – Twin Ring Motegi on October 20
- Australian MotoGP – Phillip Island on October 27
- Malaysian MotoGP – Sepang International Circuit on November 3
- Valencia MotoGP – Circuit Ricardo Tormo on November 17