Facebook is partnering with Fox Sports to stream live European soccer matches over the internet beginning in September, according to a report.

The social-networking site will stream more than a dozen matches to the US from European soccer’s top tournament, the Champions League. The deal will include games in the group stage, four Round of 16 matches, and four quarterfinal matches.

Financials of the agreement with Fox Sports — whose parent 21 Century Fox shares a common owner with News Corp., parent of The Post — have not been disclosed.

As part of its new strategy, the social media giant is using sports streaming to move advertisers to spend at a faster clip, according to Bloomberg.

Streaming soccer is quickly becoming an important piece to Facebook’s strategy, as it is the most followed sport on the network. Last year, 3.7 million people used Facebook to watch a match between Everton and Manchester United, Bloomberg reported.

Even when Facebook is not streaming live games, data shows that Facebook users crave soccer content. When Real Madrid beat Juventis of Italy in the European Professional Tournament, 34 million people had 98 million interactions on Facebook in a reaction to the match, according to the report.

“Facebook has one of the most social soccer audiences on the web, and this is going to expose the Champions’ League to fans who aren’t tuning into a game on TV,” David Nathanson, Fox Sports Business Operations head told Bloomberg.

Facebook agreed to a deal in February with Univision Communications to broadcast soccer games from Mexico’s top soccer league.

Facebook’s new strategy isn’t just focused on soccer, but video in general. Video accounted for the majority of Facebook’s advertising revenue by the fourth quarter of 2016, at 65 percent.

That number was at 35 percent a year earlier, and rose steadily, according to Business Insider Intelligence.