Sky Sports will make 25 of the remaining 92 Premier League matches available free-to-air.
The BBC will also screen live Premier League for the first time when the season resumes on 17 June.
Premier League shareholders agreed to the resumption at a meeting on Thursday, subject to safety requirements being put in place. Aston Villa v Sheffield United and Manchester City v Arsenal, which were postponed because of the League Cup final will be the first matches to be played, followed by a full match round beginning on Friday 19 June. Due to COVID-19, games will take place behind closed doors.
“Premier League Shareholders also approved a proposal that would see all 92 remaining matches broadcast live in the UK by the League’s existing broadcast partners: Sky Sports, BT Sport, BBC Sport and Amazon Prime,” the Premier League said in a statement.
“The planned kick-off times in the UK for live matches will also differ from the traditional times.”
Sky will show 64 live games including the 25 that will be free-to-air. These include the Merseyside derby between Everton and Liverpool.
Games on a Friday will kick off at 8pm, while on Saturday the slots will be 12.30pm, 3pm, 5.30pm and 8pm. Sunday matches will kick off at either 12pm, 2pm, 4.30pm and 7pm, with Monday games starting at 8pm.
Midweek games on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays will kick off at either 6pm or 8pm.
The BBC’s four matches will be the first to be seen live on any terrestrial channel since the launch on the league in 1992.