What channel is the NFL Draft on tonight (4/24/25)? | FREE LIVE STREAM, time, TV, channel for all 32 picks

Super Bowl LIX Preview

A general view of the 2025 NFL Draft logo at the NFL Experience fan festival a day prior to Super Bowl LIX between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Philadelphia Eagles inside of the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center on February 08, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana.Getty Images

The 2025 NFL Draft takes place in Green Bay, Wis., from Thursday, April 24, through Saturday, April 26, 2025 (4/26/25).

HOW TO WATCH: Fans can watch the first round for free via a trial of fuboTV and DirecTV Stream. Fans can also watch via a subscription to Sling.

Here’s what you need to know:

What: NFL Draft 2025

When: Thursday, April 24 - Saturday, April 26, 2025

Time:

Thursday, Round 1: 8 p.m. ET

Friday, Rounds 2-3: 7 p.m. ET

Saturday, Rounds 3-7: 12 p.m. ET

Where: Green Bay

TV: ABC, ESPN, ESPN Deportes, NFL Network

Channel finder: Verizon Fios, AT&T U-verse, Comcast Xfinity, Spectrum/Charter, Optimum/Altice,Cox, DIRECTV,Dish, Hulu, fuboTV, Sling.

Live stream: fuboTV, DirecTV Stream, Sling

2025 NFL Round 1 draft order:

  1. Tennessee Titans
  2. Cleveland Browns
  3. New York Giants
  4. New England Patriots
  5. Jacksonville Jaguars
  6. Las Vegas Raiders
  7. New York Jets
  8. Carolina Panthers
  9. New Orleans Saints
  10. Chicago Bears
  11. San Francisco 49ers
  12. Dallas Cowboys
  13. Miami Dolphins
  14. Indianapolis Colts
  15. Atlanta Falcons
  16. Arizona Cardinals
  17. Cincinnati Bengals
  18. Seattle Seahawks
  19. Tampa Bay Buccaneers
  20. Denver Broncos
  21. Pittsburgh Steelers
  22. Los Angeles Chargers
  23. Green Bay Packers
  24. Minnesota Vikings
  25. Houston Texans
  26. Los Angeles Rams
  27. Baltimore Ravens
  28. Detroit Lions
  29. Washington Commanders
  30. Buffalo Bills
  31. Kansas City Chiefs
  32. Philadelphia Eagles

Here’s a recent AP NFL Draft story:

DETROIT (AP) — Drake Maye planned to wear a custom suit for the NFL draft.

Hugo Boss gave the former North Carolina quarterback an offer he couldn’t refuse.

The clothing company, based in Germany and famed for its stylish fashion, paid Maye last year to make a late switch and wear one of its gray suits.

Maye accepted the inducement, walking the red carpet in Detroitin a simple Hugo Boss jacket and trousers. He saved his fancy threads for the next day.

When Maye walked off a private plane and was whisked away for his introductory news conference as the New England Patriots’ No. 3 pick overall, he was sporting the light khaki suit with Carolina blue embellishments that was designed and crafted for him to show off the previous night.

Pantheon Limited founder Ethan Weisman and Baynes + Baker co-founder Ravi Punn teamed up to put Maye in the suit he ended up wearing in Foxborough, Massachusetts, the day after the draft.

“Sometime players get six figures to wear a suit because the NFL draft is like the Oscars of sports,” Punn said in an interview with The Associated Press. “The suits are seen for a few hours before the draft, during the draft, the next day when outfits are getting graded — and forever online with social media.”

A year later, Weisman simply shrugged his shoulders over Maye’s audible in the Motor City.

“There were no hard feelings because agents are simply doing their job when they’re trying to work deals for their clients,” Weisman told the AP. “And, there were a lot of pictures of him in our suit.”

Weisman expects some first-round picks to wear his suits Thursday night in Green Bay, several more while they watch the draft from home and even a few broadcasters, including ESPN’s Mike Greenberg.

He has learned, however, not to celebrate too early.

“Green Bay is a pain to get to and I would love to not go there, but you have to build the relationship and make sure no one else is going to steal them,” Weisman said in a telephone interview earlier this week. “In the back of my mind I know anything can happen, so I won’t know for sure what they’re wearing until they are on the red carpet.

“I’m also going to bring extra suits just in case I run into a player and show him something that he thinks looks cooler than his own suit.”

Punn said Hugo Boss is “at the top of food chain,” in the competition among clothiers to entice first-round prospects to wear their suits.

“They pay a lot for that and small shops can’t and I don’t blame the players or the agents for taking advantage of that,” said Punn, who has made suits for NFL draft prospects since 2018. “If someone is paying you and your job is to help your client make money, you do that deal.”

Punn, who had some promising leads with prospects that didn’t pan out this year, expects Texas A&M edge rusher Shemar Stewart to wear one of his suits that includes a jacket with photos he provided on the lining.

Weisman has not paid NFL draft prospects to wear his suits over the last decade, but does give them one for free to wear on their big night to help build his brand and to potentially cultivate a long-term relationship with clients who may want to buy more for up to $5,000 each.

Country music star Jelly Roll recently rocked one of Weisman’s custom-made suits at the “Saturday Night Live” 50th anniversarycelebration with nearly 15 million viewers. Ezekiel Elliott took one of Weisman’s ideas and ran with it, unforgettably appearing in a crop top that exposed his stomach on the red carpet in 2016 before Dallas drafted the former Ohio State running back.

State and Liberty, a clothing company created for customers with an athletic build, got into the pay-to-play game at the NFL draft for the first time this year to help seal the deal with Penn State tight end Tyler Warren.

“We had a lot of agents reach out to us with really big offers and we passed on a lot of them,” State and Liberty co-founder Lee Moffie told the AP. “We made the decision that it’s not worth paying six figures — or even $50,000 — just to get a couple pictures of a guy in a suit.

“It’s definitely a quick money grab for them. It didn’t used to be like this, but I think NIL has made a big impact because they’re all trying to monetize wherever and however they can as fast as they can.”

Thank you for relying on us to provide the journalism you can trust. Please consider supporting us with a subscription.

If you purchase a product or register for an account through a link on our site, we may receive compensation. By using this site, you consent to our User Agreement and agree that your clicks, interactions, and personal information may be collected, recorded, and/or stored by us and social media and other third-party partners in accordance with our Privacy Policy.