Rights / Distribution
New IP Co., LLC is best treated as a rights, sublicensing, or distribution name rather than the first screen fans open on matchday.
Workbook-listed rights context, consumer-facing routes, and practical World Cup 2026 setup guidance for New IP Co., LLC.
New IP Co., LLC matters for FIFA World Cup 2026 because the official territory workbook lists it in Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela. The practical viewer route is usually DSports channels, DGO, and the wider DirecTV Latin America ecosystem, not a generic standalone stream under the rights-holder name itself.
New IP Co., LLC matters because it is the rights-side legal name tied to DirecTV Latin America. For fans, the real matchday route is DSports plus DGO. DGO's own commercial pages already describe a sports-and-entertainment platform with access through browser, mobile, tablet, Smart TV, and other streaming devices across the region.
New IP Co., LLC is best treated as a rights, sublicensing, or distribution name rather than the first screen fans open on matchday.
The practical viewing route usually sits with the downstream consumer-facing channel, app, or operator.
The official workbook places New IP Co., LLC directly in the World Cup 2026 picture for Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela.
New IP Co., LLC sits on the rights, sublicensing, telecom, or distribution side of the World Cup 2026 picture for Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela. That means the company matters, but it is not always the exact brand viewers should search for on matchday.
The real route is DSports and DGO across the listed Latin American markets, not the legal entity name itself. For full setup, viewers should think in terms of DSports channels on the TV side and DGO on the streaming side.
If you want the territory version of the same topic, use the Broadcasting hub to jump to the country guide that matches your market.
The official territory workbook lists New IP Co., LLC in Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela. In practice, viewers should treat it as a rights or distribution name and then follow the downstream consumer-facing route in each market.
The workbook places New IP Co., LLC across a wide Latin American footprint, which aligns with the DSports and DGO consumer route already visible in the region. Official DGO documents also confirm a multi-device streaming service under the same ecosystem.
For this page, the most important step is to move from New IP Co., LLC to DSports channels, DGO, and the wider DirecTV Latin America ecosystem.
That is where the actual live match schedule, app support, and subscription details usually appear.
Rights-holder pages often matter more for confirmation and less for direct viewing.
That means testing the real consumer-facing app or channel in your market, not just reading the corporate rights statement.
Country-level pages remain the cleanest way to confirm the final route in each listed market.
This is not a route that should be treated as free by default. DSports and DGO sit inside the wider DirecTV Latin America pay ecosystem, even if app download or promotional access varies by market.
This should generally be treated as a subscription or pay-TV route through DirecTV Latin America and DGO rather than a free one.
| Coverage Type | Details |
|---|---|
| Territories Listed | Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela |
| Role | Rights holder, sublicensing partner, telecom route, or distribution partner |
| Consumer-Facing Route | DSports channels, DGO, and the wider DirecTV Latin America ecosystem |
| Direct Standalone Access | No standalone New IP app; use DSports and DGO |
| Exact Match Totals | Regional DirecTV Latin America route across listed markets, with DSports on TV and DGO on streaming; package details can still vary by market |
New IP Co., LLC can still matter for cord-cutters, but only if the downstream route supports browser or app access. The main work is identifying the consumer-facing path and testing that route early.
DGO is the main app-based route to prepare if you want a streaming setup instead of a satellite or set-top-box one, and official DGO documents confirm support for browser, mobile, tablet, Smart TV, and streaming devices.
The legal entity itself is not the viewing destination. The useful part for fans is that the workbook route lines up cleanly with DSports and DGO, which already operate as the real consumer products.
| Stage | Dates |
|---|---|
| Group Stage | June 11 - June 27, 2026 |
| Round of 32 | June 28 - July 3, 2026 |
| Round of 16 | July 4 - July 7, 2026 |
| Quarter-Finals | July 9 - July 11, 2026 |
| Semi-Finals | July 14 - July 15, 2026 |
| Final | July 19, 2026 |
These are FIFA's key tournament dates. New IP Co., LLC users should still check the downstream broadcaster or telecom schedule close to kickoff because that is where the exact live-match placement will appear.
For stage-specific match lists, use the Group Stage, Round of 32, and Round of 16 schedule pages.
The consumer-facing channel or app is still the route that matters on matchday.
The final split usually appears there, not in the rights-holder wording.
If the downstream route is app-based, that is the login you should verify before June 11.
Unless the downstream broadcaster publishes a hard number, the safer wording is still yet to be confirmed.
New IP Co., LLC is mainly part of the rights or distribution picture. The real consumer route is DSports channels, DGO, and the wider DirecTV Latin America ecosystem.
Use DSports channels, DGO, and the wider DirecTV Latin America ecosystem. That is the practical route viewers should prepare before kickoff.
This is not a route that should be treated as free by default. DSports and DGO sit inside the wider DirecTV Latin America pay ecosystem, even if app download or promotional access varies by market.
DSports channels, DGO, and the wider DirecTV Latin America ecosystem is the route to monitor for browser or app access. Final entitlement depends on the downstream service.
The workbook ties New IP Co., LLC to the broader DSports and DGO ecosystem across Latin America, but exact package structure can still vary by market.
New IP Co., LLC is important because it helps explain who holds or distributes World Cup 2026 rights in Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela, but fans should still follow the real consumer route on matchday.
If you prepare DSports channels, DGO, and the wider DirecTV Latin America ecosystem in advance, you can use the rights-holder context without getting stuck looking for a stream that was never meant to be viewer-facing.