Watch Live Greyhound Racing UK — Streams, TV & Free Options

Where to watch live UK greyhound racing: Sky Sports, SIS, bookmaker streams, RPGTV and how to access free live dog racing.


Where to watch live greyhound racing in the UK via streams and TV

Best Greyhound Betting Sites – Bet on Greyhounds in 2026

Loading...

You can watch almost every UK greyhound race live — most of them for free, provided you have a funded betting account. The infrastructure for greyhound broadcasting in the UK is extensive, covering daytime BAGS cards, evening meetings, and major opens through a combination of satellite channels, bookmaker streams, and dedicated racing platforms. Unlike horse racing, where premium meetings sometimes sit behind subscription paywalls, the vast majority of greyhound racing is accessible without paying a separate viewing fee.

Watching races live is not just entertainment. For serious punters, it is an essential part of the form-study process. A race card tells you the finishing position, the time, and the running comments. A live stream shows you the trouble that the comments abbreviate, the body language of a dog warming up before the race, and the specific moments at each bend where positions change. Reading form is valuable. Watching the race that produced the form is better.

Sky Sports Racing and SIS

SIS covers daytime BAGS racing; Sky Sports Racing broadcasts evening and open events. Between these two providers, virtually every professional greyhound meeting in the UK is captured on camera.

Satellite Information Services — SIS — is the dominant broadcaster for daytime greyhound racing. If a BAGS meeting is running at Crayford, Romford, Monmore Green, or any other licensed track during the afternoon, the feed is produced and distributed by SIS. This feed is what you see in betting shops and on bookmaker streaming platforms. SIS also covers some evening fixtures, particularly at tracks that run dual schedules (afternoon and evening cards on the same day).

Sky Sports Racing provides coverage of higher-profile evening meetings and major open events. The channel is included in some Sky TV packages and is also available through streaming services such as NOW. Coverage includes pre-race analysis, expert commentary, and post-race interviews — a production level above the SIS feed, which tends to be functional rather than editorial. For significant events like the English Greyhound Derby heats and final, Sky Sports Racing offers extended build-up and in-depth preview content.

If you have a Sky TV subscription that includes the racing channel, you have access to the most comprehensive evening greyhound coverage available in the UK. If you do not, bookmaker streaming is the more practical route — and for most punters, it provides everything they need.

Bookmaker Live Streaming

Most major UK bookmakers stream greyhound races live through their websites and mobile apps. The streams are sourced from SIS and Sky Sports Racing feeds, and the coverage typically includes every race on the card — not just selected events. To access the streams, you generally need a funded account or to have placed a bet on the meeting within a recent time window (usually the last twenty-four hours).

bet365 My Greyhounds

bet365 offers one of the most comprehensive greyhound streaming services among UK bookmakers. The “My Greyhounds” section provides live video for all UK and Irish meetings, accessible on desktop and mobile. The stream quality is reliable, and the interface integrates the live video with the in-play betting markets, allowing you to watch the race and adjust your position simultaneously. To access streams, you need a funded bet365 account — a minimum balance of one penny in most cases — or to have placed a bet in the previous twenty-four hours. The stream is embedded directly in the race card page, so navigating between races is straightforward.

Coral, William Hill, Betfred

Coral and Ladbrokes (both part of the Entain group) provide live streaming of UK greyhound meetings through their apps and websites. The stream availability mirrors the SIS and Sky Sports Racing schedules, so daytime and evening cards are both covered. The requirement for access is similar to bet365: a funded account or a recent bet on the meeting.

William Hill streams greyhound racing through its app, with coverage of BAGS and evening meetings. The video player is accessible from the greyhound section of the app, and the stream launches automatically when a race is about to begin. Betfred also provides live video for UK greyhound racing, though the streaming interface varies slightly between platforms. All of these services are free beyond the account-funding requirement — there is no additional subscription fee for the streams.

Stream quality across bookmakers is generally good on stable internet connections but can vary on mobile data, particularly in areas with weaker 4G or 5G coverage. If you are watching at a track on your phone, the SIS direct feed in the venue may be more reliable than trying to stream through a bookmaker app.

RPGTV and Racing Post Greyhound Bet

Racing Post’s dedicated greyhound platform — formerly known as RPGTV — combines race cards, tips, results, and live streaming into a single interface. The platform is designed for greyhound specialists rather than general sports bettors, and the depth of data it provides alongside the live feed makes it a useful tool for punters who want to study a race while watching it unfold.

The live stream on the Racing Post greyhound platform covers the major UK meetings and is available to subscribers. The accompanying data — form guides, sectional times, trainer statistics, and track-specific performance records — is displayed alongside the video, allowing you to cross-reference what you see on screen with what the numbers show. For punters who take their greyhound analysis seriously, the combination of live visual and structured data is more useful than a standalone bookmaker stream, which typically offers the video without the analytical context.

Timeform also provides greyhound coverage with a similar data-plus-commentary approach. Their race cards include calculated times, form ratings, and analyst comments that go beyond the basic information found on most bookmaker sites. While Timeform does not stream video directly, using their data alongside a bookmaker stream gives you the best of both — expert-level form analysis with live visuals.

Watching to Improve Your Betting

Live viewing is the only way to spot trouble in running that the form card cannot fully capture. Running comments like “Bmp2” (bumped at bend two) tell you that interference occurred, but they do not tell you how severe it was. A bump might cost a dog half a length or three lengths, depending on the angle and the speed of impact. Only by watching the replay can you judge whether the interference was a minor brush or a race-ending collision.

Build the habit of watching replays of races you are studying, not just the next race you intend to bet on. When a dog in an upcoming race has a form line that reads “6th, 30.05, CrdRnUp, Bmp3,” watching that specific past race tells you whether the dog was unlucky or genuinely outpaced. The form card compresses the information; the video expands it. Over time, this practice refines your ability to interpret running comments and makes your form analysis significantly more accurate.

Pay particular attention to the first bend. Most position changes in greyhound racing happen at bend one and bend two. The run from the traps to the first bend establishes the order that usually persists through the rest of the race. Watching how dogs break, which ones show early pace, and which get squeezed for room gives you direct insight into the running styles that the sectional times only hint at.

Screens, Not Seats

The best race readers watch more races than they bet on. That ratio — watching many, betting few — is the discipline that separates punters who understand greyhound racing from those who merely participate in it. Every race you watch without betting is an investment in your ability to read the next one. The dog that gets crowded at bend two today will be in a different trap next week, and you will remember what happened. The form card will abbreviate it. You will know the full story.