San Francisco 49ers owner Jed York has joined a growing chorus of powerful NFL figures calling out the league as fans are forced to pay sky-high streaming fees just to watch full NFL Wild Card games
Santa Clara, Calif. — As the NFL reaches the most intense stage of its season, a major controversy has erupted off the field. This time, the criticism is not coming from frustrated fans, but from the league’s power structure itself. San Francisco 49ers owner Jed York has publicly called out the NFL’s current broadcast model, arguing that fans are being forced to pay increasingly expensive streaming fees simply to watch complete Wild Card games.
Over the past several years, the NFL has aggressively fragmented its media rights across multiple platforms. Instead of turning on a single television channel, fans now have to stack subscriptions just to follow the postseason. According to estimates from within the U.S. media industry, a fan attempting to watch all Wild Card games may need to spend more than $90 per month, including ESPN (nearly $30), Amazon Prime ($14.99), Peacock and Paramount+ (each close to $12), and Fox One (approximately $20).
For many middle-class households, that price tag is no longer a casual entertainment expense. As these monthly fees add up just to watch a handful of playoff games, a growing number of fans admit they can no longer afford to watch their own team, even during the most important moments of the season.

Sources close to York say his frustration is not about protecting the 49ers’ interests, but about a deeper concern that the NFL is slowly severing its bond with the very community that built the league. His message was direct and uncompromising:
“Football belongs to the fans, not to endless subscriptions. When San Francisco 49ers fans have to jump from one paywall to another just to watch their team, the NFL isn’t growing the game — it’s stripping away its soul.”
The statement quickly resonated across the league because it highlights the NFL’s central contradiction. On one hand, media rights deals worth tens of billions of dollars have helped drive record revenue. On the other, that same model has erected financial barriers that shrink access for everyday fans.
The dissatisfaction is not limited to San Francisco. League sources indicate that several other owners and team executives are privately questioning the NFL’s direction, increasing pressure on commissioner Roger Goodell and the league office. The fundamental question is becoming harder to ignore: Is the NFL prioritizing broadcast revenue, or the fans who made the league what it is?
Behind the scenes, that pressure is reportedly forcing the NFL to explore options once considered unthinkable, including launching a league-owned streaming platform or making select playoff games free to watch to ensure broad accessibility.
For York, the issue goes far beyond money. It is about the identity of the NFL itself — whether it remains a shared, communal sport that families can experience together, or evolves into a premium product locked behind multiple paywalls.
The debate is far from over. But when owners begin speaking publicly, the message is unmistakable: If the NFL wants to keep growing, it cannot do so by pushing its fans away.













