Wolves v Norwich City live stream: How to watch the Premier League from anywhere in the world

Wolves v Norwich City live stream
(Image credit: PA)

Wolves v Norwich City live stream, Sunday 15 May, 2pm BST

Wolves will be looking to bounce back from Wednesday’s thrashing by Manchester City when they take on Norwich this weekend.

Bruno Lage’s side were powerless to resists the champions in a rearranged fixture in midweek, as the four-goal Kevin De Bruyne inspired City to a 5-1 victory. That result looks to have ended Wolves’ hopes of European football next season: to qualify for the Europa Conference League from here, they will need to win both of their remaining matches and hope West Ham lose to City and Brighton.

This has still been a good season for Wolves. The transition from Nuno Espirito Santo to Lage could have been tough given how well the former had done during his time in charge, but Wolves will almost certainly finish in the top half of the table. It is true that their form has tailed off in recent months, but there are still plenty of positives to take from this campaign.

The same cannot be said for Norwich, who have once again failed to survive in the Premier League. In truth, the Canaries have never really looked like staying up. They look set to finish bottom of the table and could end the campaign as many as 19 points adrift of 17th place.

Dean Smith will hope to salvage some pride in his team’s two remaining matches, but he has probably already turned his attention to next term, when Norwich will be looking to secure an instant return to the top tier.

Wolves will have to make do without Max Kilman, Nelson Semedo and Romain Saiss, while Daniel Podence is a doubt but with a toe injury.

Norwich will be unable to call upon the services of Adam Idah, Andrew Omobamidele, Christoph Zimmerman, Kenny McLean, Josh Sargent, Ozan Kabak and Mathias Normann for their final away game of the season.

Kick-off is at 2pm BST on Sunday 15 May. See below for international broadcast options.

Subscribe to FourFourTwo today and save over a third on standard price.

VPN guide

Use a VPN to watch Premier league football from outside your country

Tottenham striker Harry Kane | West Ham v Tottenham live stream

(Image credit: Getty)

If you’re out of the country for a round of Premier League fixtures, then annoyingly your domestic on-demand services won’t work – the broadcaster knows where you are because of your IP address (boo!). You'll be blocked from watching it, which is not ideal if you’ve paid up for a subscription and still want to catch the action without resorting to illegal feeds you’ve found on Reddit.

But assistance is on hand. To get around that, all you have to do is get a Virtual Private Network (VPN), assuming it complies with your broadcaster’s T&Cs. A VPN creates a private connection between your device and t'internet, meaning the service can’t work out where you are and won't automatically block the service you've paid for. All the info going between is entirely encrypted – and that's a result.

There are plenty of good-value options out there, including:

VPN legal disclaimer for Premier League live stream

(Image credit: Future)
ExpressVPN

ExpressVPN including a 30-day, money-back guarantee

FourFourTwo’s brainy office mates TechRadar love its super speedy connections, trustworthy security and the fact it works with Android, Apple, Roku, Amazon Fire TV, PS4 and loads more. You also get a money-back guarantee, 24/7 support and it's currently available for a knockdown price. Go get it! 

NordVPN NordLocker

NordVPN with quality mobile and desktop apps

A cheaper option and almost ExpressVPN's equal when it comes to quality, too. A single subscription covers six connections, so you can use it on mobile, laptop, streaming devices and more, all at the same time.

Surfshark Surfshark VPN

Surfshark offers a great VPN at a fraction of the price

It's clear to see why Surfshark is top of TechRadar's best cheap VPN table – it combines an excellent product with bargain pricing, starting at £2/$2.50 a month!

UK TV rights

How to watch Premier League live streams for UK subscribers

UK VPN Premier League live streams

Sky Sports and BT Sport are the two main players once again, but Amazon also have a slice of the pie in 2021/22. 

US TV rights

How to watch Premier League live streams for US subscribers

USA VPN Premier League live streams

NBC Sports Group are the Premier League rights holders, with the Peacock Premium streaming platform showing even more than the 175 games it aired last season, with other matches split between NBCSN channel, CNBC and the over-the-air NBC broadcast channel. If you pick up a fuboTV subscription for the games not on Peacock Premium, you'll be able to watch every game.

Head back to our VPN advice so you can take advantage when you're out of the country. 

Canada TV rights

How to watch Premier League live streams for Canadian subscribers

Canada VPN Premier League live streams

DAZN subscribers can watch every single Premier League game in 2021/22 – and it gets better. After a one-month free trial, you'll only have to pay a rolling $20-a-month fee, or make it an annual subscription of $150.

The broadcaster also has all the rights to Champions League and Europa League games in Canada, too.

Want in while you're out of Canada? Scroll back up and check out the VPN offers above. 

Australia TV rights

How to watch Premier League live streams for Australian subscribers

Australia VPN Premier League live streams

Optus Sport are offering every game of the Premier League season for just $14.99/month for non-subscribers, which you can get via a Fetch TV box and other friendly streaming devices.

To take advantage while you're not Down Under, follow the VPN advice towards the top of this page. 

New Zealand TV rights

How to watch a Premier League live stream for New Zealand subscribers

New Zealand VPN Premier League live streams

(Image credit: Future)

Spark Sport are serving up all 380 games – plus various highlights and magazine shows throughout the week, as well as the Champions League – for $24.99 a month, after a seven-day free trial. 

It's also available via web browsers, Apple/Android devices, Google Chromecast and some Samsung TVs, and Apple TV and Smart TV compatibility new for this season.

Check out our VPN deals to watch when you’re not in New Zealand.

New features you’d love on FourFourTwo.com

Greg Lea

Greg Lea is a freelance football journalist who's filled in wherever FourFourTwo needs him since 2014. He became a Crystal Palace fan after watching a 1-0 loss to Port Vale in 1998, and once got on the scoresheet in a primary school game against Wilfried Zaha's Whitehorse Manor (an own goal in an 8-0 defeat).