Amazon today published its full June 2026 content schedule for Prime Video in the United States, detailing a month-long mix of original series, licensed films, live sports across six distinct properties, music festival livestreams, and a dedicated Pride Month programming collection. The announcement, written by Tyler Greenawalt and published June 1, 2026, covers content available to US Prime members, with Amazon advising viewers to check local Amazon websites for availability outside the United States.

The June schedule arrives weeks after Amazon's 2026 upfront presentation at the Beacon Theatre in New York City, where the company formally positioned Prime Video as what it described as a full-year sports network and a destination for premium original programming. The upfront also introduced Dynamic TV Creative, Amazon's first product designed to automatically personalize interactive video ads based on viewer shopping signals - a capability that makes the content mix on Prime Video directly relevant to advertisers seeking audience-level targeting during high-value programming windows.

Original series and film premieres

The most prominent original premiere of the month is The Legend of Vox Machina Season 4, arriving June 3. According to Amazon, the new season is set one year after the Chroma Conclave arc and follows Vox Machina separated across different narrative threads as they search "for love, family, and purpose," before a new antagonist forces the ensemble to reunite.

Clarkson's Farm Season 5 also premieres June 3. The fifth installment follows Jeremy Clarkson as he contends with changes at Diddly Squat Farm against the backdrop of a UK government budget that, according to Amazon, sent "the United Kingdom farming community into an uproar." The show has built a consistent following since its debut and remains one of Prime Video's most-watched factual series in the UK.

June 10 brings Every Year After, an eight-episode series adapted from Carley Fortune's novel Every Summer After. Starring Sadie Soverall as Percy Fraser and Matt Cornett as Sam Florek, the series spans six years and one week in the lake town of Barry's Bay.

Your Fault: London arrives June 17. A sequel to My Fault: London, the film is the second English-language adaptation of Mercedes Ron's Culpables trilogy. It follows Noah (Asha Banks) and Nick (Matthew Broome) as complications emerge while she studies at Oxford and he navigates professional pressures. The series represents Amazon MGM Studios' continued investment in European-origin, English-language adaptations.

See You at Work Tomorrow! launches June 22. The Korean workplace romance is adapted from a Kakao Webtoon by McQueen Studio and stars Park Ji-hyun as Cha Ji-yoon, a product planner who has sworn off dating, alongside Seo In-guk as Kang Si-woo. The series reflects Prime Video's ongoing commissioning of East Asian originals for global distribution.

Pride Month titles

June is also Pride Month, and Prime Video has assembled a curated collection spotlighting LGBTQ+ stories. The flagship film is Hedda, a modern adaptation of Henrik Ibsen's classic play starring Tessa Thompson as Hedda Gabler. Nia DaCosta - director of Candyman and The Marvels - both directed and wrote the screenplay. Other highlighted titles in the collection include Overcompensating, a college-set ensemble comedy starring Benito Skinner as Benny, a closeted former football player, alongside Wally Baram as Carmen. The collection also features Red, White & Royal Blue, based on Casey McQuiston's New York Times bestselling novel, and Hazbin Hotel. Amazon has made a dedicated Pride Month collection page available for the full lineup.

Catalogue additions on June 1

A substantial batch of licensed titles arrives June 1. The list spans several decades and genres, including 12 Angry Men(1957), Midnight Cowboy (1969), Bull Durham (1988), Legally Blonde (2001), The Notebook (2004), Beetlejuice Beetlejuice (arriving June 6), and Priscilla (2023, arriving June 23). Additional family-oriented titles including Hitpig!and Boonie Bears Guardian Code arrive June 5. The SpongeBob Movie: Search for Squarepants lands June 19.

Live sports across six leagues

June carries significant live sports inventory across six different properties - WNBA, NASCAR, New York Yankees MLB, NWSL, ONE Championship, and NBA-adjacent programming - making it one of the denser live sports months on the platform to date.

WNBA

June marks the beginning of Amazon's first full season of WNBA coverage under the new 11-year media rights agreement that began with the 2026 season. That deal, announced in July 2024 alongside the NBA agreement, gives Prime Video exclusive global streaming rights to 31 WNBA regular-season games per season, including the Championship Game of the WNBA Commissioner's Cup. The total value of the WNBA's combined 11-year media rights package with Disney, Amazon, and NBCUniversal was reported at $2.2 billion, or roughly $200 million per season.

In June, Prime Video streams six WNBA games:

  • Thursday June 4 at 7 p.m. ET: Atlanta Dream at Indiana Fever
  • Thursday June 4 at 9 p.m. ET: Golden State Valkyries at Minnesota Lynx
  • Thursday June 11 at 7 p.m. ET: Chicago Sky at Indiana Fever
  • Thursday June 11 at 9 p.m. ET: Phoenix Mercury at Dallas Wings
  • Thursday June 18 at 7:30 p.m. ET: Atlanta Dream at Indiana Fever
  • Thursday June 25 at 7 p.m. ET: Los Angeles Sparks at Toronto Tempo
  • Tuesday June 30: WNBA Commissioner's Cup Championship (time TBD)

According to Amazon, Prime Video will stream 31 WNBA games during the 2026 season, with the slate including games featuring Caitlin Clark, A'ja Wilson, and 2026 first overall pick Azzi Fudd.

NASCAR

Prime Video continues its multi-year NASCAR rights agreement, with three Cup Series races in June:

  • Sunday June 7 at 2 p.m. ET: FireKeepers Casino 400 at Michigan International Speedway
  • Sunday June 14 at 2 p.m. ET: NASCAR Cup Series Race at Pocono Raceway
  • Sunday June 21 at 2:30 p.m. ET: Anduril 250 at Naval Base Coronado

According to Amazon, Prime Video will stream five NASCAR Cup Series races in 2026 in total. NASCAR's racing schedule on streaming is now in its second year on the platform, having launched with the 2025 season following an agreement announced in November 2023. The Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway aired in May 2026.

New York Yankees

Five New York Yankees MLB games are available to local Prime members in June:

  • Wednesday June 3 at 7:05 p.m. ET: Cleveland Guardians at New York Yankees
  • Tuesday June 9 at 6:40 p.m. ET: New York Yankees at Cleveland Guardians
  • Wednesday June 17 at 7:05 p.m. ET: Chicago White Sox at New York Yankees
  • Wednesday June 24 at 6:40 p.m. ET: New York Yankees at Detroit Tigers
  • Tuesday June 30 at 7:05 p.m. ET: Detroit Tigers at New York Yankees

According to Amazon, this Yankees coverage is available to local Prime members during the 2026 MLB season - a geographically restricted broadcast, unlike the national sports rights packages.

NWSL

The National Women's Soccer League contributes one scheduled match in June. On Friday June 26 at 8 p.m. ET, Gotham FC faces Kansas City Current in the NWSL Challenge Cup. Amazon began streaming 27 NWSL matches during the 2025 season, including the Challenge Cup, and the 2026 season continues that arrangement with the same match count.

ONE Championship

ONE Championship adds a martial arts fixture on Friday June 26 at 9 p.m. ET, featuring George Jarvi versus Rungrawee Sitsongpeenong.

Amazon Music livestreams

Three distinct Amazon Music livestream events run through Prime Video in June, available via the Amazon Music app, Amazon's Twitch channel, and Prime Video itself.

Primavera Sound Barcelona

June 4 through 6, Amazon Music will exclusively livestream Primavera Sound Barcelona for the fourth consecutive year. The festival takes place at the Parc del Forum in Barcelona - a 75,000-capacity site on the city's seafront. According to Amazon, the sold-out festival features "some of the biggest names in rock, pop, electronic, and beyond," with Amazon Music broadcasting live performances, artist interviews, and behind-the-scenes content to global audiences.

Primavera Sound 2026 is the 24th edition of the festival, which was founded in 2001. Amazon Music has streamed the event since at least 2023, when it broadcast via its Twitch channel and Prime Video simultaneously. The 2024 edition drew 268,000 attendees, with 59% coming from outside Spain.

Nike Soccer TOMA Live

On June 7, Amazon Music will livestream Nike Soccer's multi-city TOMA Live event globally. According to Amazon, the event spans Los Angeles, Mexico City, and New York City and is built around Nike Soccer's "Mad Baller" platform. It will feature live performances, creator storytelling, athlete appearances, and competition moments - a hybrid of music, sport, and youth culture content.

Amazon Music City Sessions Mexico - Season 3

Season 3 of Amazon Music City Sessions Mexico launches June 24 and June 30 with its first two episodes, with additional episodes rolling out throughout the season. According to Amazon, the series delivers "live performances, artist moments, and exclusive content designed to connect fans with the music and culture shaping today's Latin music landscape," broadcasting from Mexico City via the Amazon Music app, the Amazon Music En Vivo channel on Twitch, and Prime Video.

Why this matters for advertisers

For advertising and media professionals, the June content slate functions as a proxy for how Amazon has structured its streaming inventory over the past two years. The platform launched advertising across Prime Video in January 2024, initially reaching an estimated 115 million monthly viewers in the United States. By Q4 2025, Prime Video had grown to 315 million global viewers on an ad-supported basis, with Amazon's advertising services revenue reaching $21.3 billion - a 23% increase year-over-year.

The June sports load is not incidental. Amazon's VP of Global Advertising Sales, Alan Moss, described live sports, streaming, and retail media as a single unified offering heading into the 2026 upfront season, not separate inventory categories. The WNBA, NWSL, NASCAR, and Yankees fixtures in June collectively create multiple premium contextual advertising windows across different audience demographics, each drawing on Amazon's first-party retail data for targeting.

The WNBA games carry particular weight. The June 30 WNBA Commissioner's Cup Championship is a marquee placement, exclusive to Prime Video globally. Live sports games of this type command premium CPMs and reach audiences that typically skew toward higher-value advertiser categories, including automotive, financial services, and consumer electronics.

Amazon's Dynamic TV Creative - announced at the May 2026 upfront - is scheduled to expand into live sports inventory in Q3 2026. That product dynamically adjusts ad interactivity formats, calls-to-action, headlines, and product details at the moment of impression using shopping history, browsing data, Prime Video engagement signals, product availability, and geographic location. When that capability reaches live sports inventory later this summer, June's WNBA and NASCAR games will become the kind of inventory it targets.

The May 2026 lineup on Prime Video followed a similar structural template, combining scripted originals, live sports across five leagues, and Amazon Music events - including Rolling Loud (May 8-10) and the 61st ACM Awards (May 17). June extends that pattern, adding the WNBA's first Commissioner's Cup Championship under the new rights deal as the month's single highest-profile live event.

The Amazon Music component is also relevant to programmatic buyers. The Primavera Sound exclusive livestream, now in its fourth consecutive year, reaches a global audience outside the US without the geographic restrictions that apply to the Yankees MLB coverage. That global music content creates inventory segments that fall outside traditional sports CPM calculations - a different audience profile from the domestic live sports schedule running simultaneously in the first week of June.

Amazon's advertising infrastructure has expanded significantly over the 18 months leading into this slate. Amazon enabled zip code-level targeting for Prime Video in November 2025, allowing location-based interactive ads for categories including automotive, insurance, and retail. Amazon Marketing Cloud added Prime Video viewership signals in November 2025, enabling advertisers to cross-reference streaming consumption patterns with purchase behavior inside AMC's privacy-safe clean room environment. Both capabilities apply to June's inventory.

The subscription tier also shapes who sees which content with or without ads. Amazon rebranded its ad-free tier as Prime Video Ultra in March 2026, raising the price from $2.99 to $4.99 per month, while keeping content access identical across tiers. June's live sports, originals, and music livestreams remain available to all subscribers regardless of tier - only the ad experience differs.

Timeline

Summary

Who: Amazon, through Prime Video and Amazon Music, targeting US Prime subscribers for scripted content and sports, with global distribution for Amazon Music livestreams including Primavera Sound Barcelona and Amazon Music City Sessions Mexico.

What: The full June 2026 content schedule for Prime Video in the United States, including Season 4 of The Legend of Vox Machina (June 3), Season 5 of Clarkson's Farm (June 3), four new series and film premieres across the month, a curated Pride Month programming collection, 31 total WNBA games (six in June, with the WNBA Commissioner's Cup Championship on June 30), three NASCAR Cup Series races, five New York Yankees MLB games for local Prime members, one NWSL Challenge Cup match (June 26), ONE Championship martial arts programming, and three Amazon Music livestream events covering Primavera Sound Barcelona (June 4-6), Nike Soccer TOMA Live (June 7), and Amazon Music City Sessions Mexico Season 3 (June 24 and June 30).

When: The announcement was published June 1, 2026. Content runs throughout the month of June 2026, with most marquee premieres and live sports events spread across the first three weeks.

Where: Available to Prime Video subscribers in the United States. Amazon Music livestreams are accessible globally via the Amazon Music app, Amazon's Twitch channel, and Prime Video. The Yankees MLB coverage is geographically restricted to local Prime members. Amazon advises checking local Amazon websites for availability outside the US.

Why: Amazon uses a dense monthly content schedule to maintain subscriber engagement and increase advertising inventory across diverse audience segments. June's schedule is structurally significant: it represents the first full month of Prime Video's WNBA broadcasting under the new 11-year, $2.2 billion media rights deal that began with the 2026 season. The Commissioner's Cup Championship on June 30 is the flagship live sports event, exclusive to Prime Video globally. For advertisers, the mixture of premium live sports, original programming, and international music livestreams creates multiple contextual inventory windows - particularly relevant as Amazon prepares to expand its Dynamic TV Creative personalization product into live sports inventory in Q3 2026.