How to Watch FIFA World Cup 2026 Live on Beeline TV
Beeline TV is no longer a safe World Cup plan in Uzbekistan. That is the most important update readers need before building any FIFA World Cup 2026 setup around the service. Beeline Uzbekistan has officially announced that the platform will stop operating on May 30, 2026. The tournament begins on June 11. Those two dates change the whole article.
This correction matters because older football habits pointed in the other direction. Beeline’s own EURO 2024 recap said the service carried that tournament on the Zor TV channel without extra viewing fees. It was reasonable for readers to think the World Cup might follow the same path. That assumption no longer works. The platform ends before kickoff.
Beeline TV shuts down before the World Cup begins
Beeline’s own notice is clear. The company says Beeline TV will officially cease operations on May 30, 2026. Active subscriptions will be cancelled, and users are being pushed toward the new KINOM service. That means Beeline TV itself cannot be treated as a dependable World Cup route anymore.
The timing is what makes this so important. If the closure came after the tournament, readers could still use the platform for the opener and early group stage. That is not the case. The service disappears before the first match is played.
This is why the article needed a complete rewrite rather than small edits. The old version could still sound usable if a reader skimmed it quickly. The new reality is much sharper. Beeline TV is ending, so the service should not sit at the center of anyone’s World Cup planning.
What Beeline’s EURO 2024 history still tells us
The old football link is still useful as background. In its own 2024 recap, Beeline said EURO 2024 aired on the Zor TV channel inside Beeline TV. That tells us the platform had already played a role in delivering major football through a local broadcast partner. So the older article was not random. It was simply overtaken by new facts.
That history also helps explain what readers should watch next. Zor TV remains the stronger name in the local World Cup television picture, while Beeline’s old platform route has vanished. The television-side signal survived. The app-side signal changed.
The broader rights map in World Cup 2026 broadcasting rights still points local readers toward the underlying Uzbekistan rights structure rather than toward a disappearing telecom app. That is where the safe answer now sits.
What KINOM changes and what it does not change
Beeline is not leaving users with nothing. Its shutdown notice tells customers to move to KINOM, the company’s new online cinema product. KINOM says it carries films, series, sports broadcasts, and TV channels, and Beeline is even offering a short premium window. That sounds useful, yet it is not the same as a confirmed World Cup answer.
The critical gap is simple. Beeline has not publicly confirmed that KINOM will carry the World Cup, and it has not published a final 2026 football package tied to the tournament. So readers should not assume that Beeline TV has simply been renamed. That would be a risky shortcut.
This is where careful writing helps. KINOM may still become relevant, but the official public connection to the World Cup is still yet to be confirmed. Until that happens, Beeline’s role in your planning should stay secondary. The article now says that directly.
Where Uzbekistan viewers should look instead
The stronger local name remains Zor TV. Current World Cup rights mapping still connects Uzbekistan with Zor TV, which makes it the more reliable television-side reference for the tournament. If you are deciding where to focus your attention today, Zor TV is a better first stop than Beeline’s discontinued TV platform.
That does not solve every distribution detail. The final streaming and app route still needs a clearer public release before opening week. Yet it does solve the main consumer mistake. You should not prepare around a platform that is shutting down.
If you want the television-side explanation in more detail, the Zor TV in Uzbekistan article now explains why that brand matters more than Beeline TV for this tournament. The two posts work together, with one identifying the stronger local channel and the other warning readers away from an outdated app assumption.
Why this correction matters before opening week
World Cup planning breaks down when readers rely on last tournament habits. That is exactly what could happen here. Beeline TV worked as a football route in 2024, so readers could easily assume it would work again in 2026. The shutdown notice changes that.
This is also a good example of why broadcaster articles need fresh research close to kickoff. Telecom apps, sublicensing structures, and local streaming routes can move quickly. If a page does not absorb those changes, it becomes dangerous rather than helpful. The update fixes that problem.
You can keep tracking any late Uzbekistan platform changes in the How to Watch hub on FWCTimes. On the current evidence, though, Beeline TV itself is not a safe World Cup route because the service ends before the tournament starts.
This is exactly the kind of late change that can hurt readers if a broadcaster article stays stale for even one week. Telecom services can change strategy fast, and football fans often return to the same app they used for the last major event without checking whether it still exists. That habit would fail here.
The updated article now gives a cleaner consumer answer. Beeline’s old football route explains why the query exists, the shutdown notice explains why the route no longer works, and Zor TV plus a future confirmed digital path explain where attention should move next. That is a far stronger public service than the old version.
It also protects readers from wasting money or time on a platform that will not exist when the opener arrives. In a tournament month, that kind of correction matters as much as any single channel name.
Readers can still monitor KINOM or any later partner announcement, yet they should do that from a position of caution, not assumption. The shutdown date changed the burden of proof.
That is why the article now treats any replacement route as unconfirmed until the broadcaster or platform says otherwise. In rights coverage, that level of discipline keeps readers safe.
Frequently asked questions
Can I watch the World Cup on Beeline TV in 2026?
You should not plan around it. Beeline Uzbekistan says the service shuts down on May 30, 2026, before the World Cup begins.
Why did older Beeline football expectations exist?
Because Beeline TV carried EURO 2024 on the Zor TV channel. That earlier football role no longer guarantees anything for the World Cup.
Is KINOM the new confirmed World Cup service?
Not yet. Beeline is moving users to KINOM, but a confirmed World Cup 2026 package there is still yet to be confirmed.
What local broadcaster name should Uzbekistan fans follow first?
Zor TV is the stronger television-side name in the current rights picture. It is a safer first reference point than a discontinued Beeline TV platform.
What is the smartest setup after the shutdown notice?
Stop relying on Beeline TV, follow Zor TV as the main local channel name, and wait for a final confirmed digital route before kickoff. That is the safest current plan.
