What TNA No Surrender 2026 is about
TNA No Surrender 2026 is a professional wrestling pay-per-view event produced by Total Nonstop Action Wrestling, staged on February 13, 2026, at The Pinnacle in Nashville, Tennessee — a venue that gave the night a tighter, more electric atmosphere than some of TNA's larger arena shows. The event serves as the 17th installment in the No Surrender chronology, which means it carries some history behind it even if casual viewers are coming in fresh. Ten matches in total made up the card, two of which aired on the Countdown to No Surrender pre-show. The headline conflict pitted tag team partners Eddie Edwards and Nic Nemeth against the rising duo of Leon Slater and Mike Santana, with championship gold and bragging rights on the line. Not a slow burn. Right from the pre-show, the pacing made clear that TNA intended this to be a statement night.
How TNA No Surrender 2026 came together — production, roster, and context
TNA No Surrender 2026 was produced entirely by Total Nonstop Action Wrestling and streamed exclusively on TNA+, the company's dedicated subscription platform. There's no theatrical run, no box-office figure to cite here — this is a live wrestling event built for the streaming audience, rated TV-14, and running a substantial 173 minutes from bell to bell. That runtime puts it well past the two-and-a-half-hour mark, which is long even by pay-per-view standards, though the card's ten matches justify most of that real estate.
One of the more interesting production wrinkles for this show was the involvement of WWE NXT talent, a product of the ongoing partnership between TNA and WWE's developmental brand. That cross-promotional element has given TNA cards a different texture over the past year or so — you're seeing faces that NXT viewers recognize, which widens the potential audience without alienating TNA's core fanbase. Hard to say if that partnership fully paid off on this particular night, but it's a visible part of the show's identity.
The roster depth on display was real. Arianna Grace challenging Léi Yǐng Lee for the TNA Knockouts World Championship was a match that had been building through weeks of television, and Trey Miguel's pursuit of the TNA International Championship against Channing "Stacks" Lorenzo gave the mid-card genuine stakes. According to Pro Wrestling Net's post-event review, the show delivered on its major promised matches while leaving some room for storytelling threads to continue. No major awards circuit exists for wrestling events the way it does for film, and there's no Metascore or Rotten Tomatoes page attached — the metrics here are crowd heat, title changes, and whether the stories land. On two of those three counts, No Surrender 2026 did its job.
Movie OTT tracks streaming availability for content like this across platforms, which is especially useful when TNA+ isn't always top of mind for viewers who primarily live on Netflix or Prime Video.
Why TNA No Surrender 2026 stands out among recent TNA events
What's striking is how much the main event result reframed the entire show in retrospect. Mike Santana and Leon Slater defeating Nic Nemeth and Eddie Edwards wasn't the expected outcome — Nemeth in particular carries name recognition that usually signals a different kind of booking — and the win felt genuinely surprising in a way that wrestling doesn't always manage. Santana's intensity throughout the match, especially in the closing stretch, was the kind of performance that makes you pay attention to someone you might have been casually tracking before.
The title changes added weight. Arianna Grace winning the TNA Knockouts World Championship from Léi Yǐng Lee was the night's most emotionally charged moment, and Trey Miguel's International Championship victory gave the show a third title change to close out — three championships switching hands in one night is a lot, and TNA leaned into that as a selling point. As Nerdly's review put it, the event was "solid, if slightly uneven," which is an honest read. Not every match on a ten-match card is going to hit equally, and a couple of the mid-card bouts felt like they existed to fill time rather than advance anything meaningful.
The IMDb rating sits at 5/10 based on nine votes — a sample too small to be meaningful, honestly, but it does suggest the show hasn't broken through to a broader pop-culture conversation. That's fine. TNA events are built for wrestling fans, and on that audience's terms, No Surrender 2026 delivered more than it stumbled. The Pinnacle as a venue deserves a mention too: intimate enough that crowd reactions felt amplified, which is something the TV broadcast captured well.
MovieOTT editors flagged this title as worth a watch for fans tracking TNA's current trajectory, particularly given the championship implications that ripple into subsequent programming.
Where to stream TNA No Surrender 2026 online
TNA No Surrender 2026 is available to stream on major OTT services — check the Where-to-Watch widget at the top of this page for the most current platform listings, since availability can shift. The primary home for this event is TNA+, the official streaming service for Total Nonstop Action Wrestling content, where subscribers can access the full 173-minute broadcast including the Countdown to No Surrender pre-show. If you're not already a TNA+ subscriber, this event — given the title changes and main-event result — is a reasonable entry point for anyone curious about where TNA's storylines are heading in 2026. Movie OTT aggregates streaming availability across services so you don't have to check each platform manually, which saves time when you're trying to track down something like a wrestling pay-per-view that isn't on every major service.
Frequently asked questions
Q: Who won the main event of TNA No Surrender 2026?
Mike Santana and Leon Slater defeated Nic Nemeth and Eddie Edwards in the main event tag team match. The result was considered a surprise given Nemeth's profile, and it's generated significant discussion in TNA fan communities since the event aired on February 13, 2026.
Q: Where can I watch TNA No Surrender 2026?
TNA No Surrender 2026 streams on TNA+ and is available on major OTT services. The Where-to-Watch widget at the top of this Movie OTT page shows current platform availability, which is the fastest way to confirm where it's streaming right now.
Q: How long is TNA No Surrender 2026?
The event runs 173 minutes in total, which includes both the main card and the two-match Countdown to No Surrender pre-show. That's nearly three hours of content — plan accordingly.
Q: Which championships changed hands at TNA No Surrender 2026?
Three titles changed hands: Arianna Grace won the TNA Knockouts World Championship from Léi Yǐng Lee, Trey Miguel captured the TNA International Championship from Channing "Stacks" Lorenzo, and the tag team main event resulted in a title-relevant victory for Santana and Slater over Nemeth and Edwards.
Q: Is TNA No Surrender 2026 connected to WWE NXT?
Yes — according to Wikipedia's event entry, the show featured appearances by WWE NXT talent as part of the ongoing partnership between TNA and WWE's developmental brand. That cross-promotional element has been a recurring feature of TNA events over the past year.
Final thoughts on TNA No Surrender 2026
TNA No Surrender 2026 won't be remembered as an all-time classic, but it doesn't need to be. Three title changes, a genuine main-event surprise, and a card deep enough to fill nearly three hours without overstaying its welcome — that's a functional, often entertaining wrestling show. Fans already invested in TNA's 2026 storylines will get the most out of it. Newcomers curious about where the company stands right now could do worse than starting here. Check the streaming options above, and let Movie OTT do the legwork on finding where it's currently available.
