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Is Netflix still worth it in 2026?

Netflix has raised prices four times since 2019 and added ads. We run the honest math on what you're getting, how it compares, and when canceling and rotating makes more sense.

June 2026 · 7 min read
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CancelNest EditorialUpdated June 2026

What Netflix actually costs in 2026

Netflix has raised prices steadily since 2019 and its current US pricing reflects that:

PlanMonthly priceStreamsResolutionAds
Standard with Ads$7.9921080pYes - 4–5 min/hr
Standard$15.4921080pNo
Premium$22.9944K + HDRNo

The password sharing crackdown, fully implemented in 2023, means you can no longer share an account with people outside your household without paying an extra $7.99/month per person. Households that used to split a single plan between two locations now pay full price for each.

What you get - and what you don't anymore

Netflix in 2026 is a different product from Netflix in 2019. The original content investment has produced genuine prestige - Squid Game, Wednesday, Stranger Things, The Crown, Beef, and dozens of other titles that exist only on Netflix. The documentary and stand-up comedy libraries remain strong. For families with kids, Netflix's animated content is extensive.

What you don't get anymore: the massive licensed library that made Netflix feel indispensable in its first decade. Friends, The Office, Parks and Recreation, and most major network TV shows have migrated to their respective network streaming services (Max, Peacock, Paramount+). Netflix today is primarily a first-party content service - you're paying for Netflix Originals, not access to all of television.

This is why the "is Netflix worth it" calculation has changed. In 2017, Netflix had both its originals and most of the TV you'd ever want to watch. In 2026, it has its originals and a narrower licensed catalog.

How Netflix compares

ServicePrice (ad-free)Best for
Netflix Standard$15.49/moNetflix Originals, international content
Disney+ Standard$13.99/moMarvel, Star Wars, Pixar, Disney animated
Max$15.99/moHBO prestige TV, DC, Warner Bros films
Hulu$17.99/moCurrent season network TV, FX originals
Apple TV+$9.99/moHigh-quality Apple Originals, smaller catalog
Peacock$7.99/moNBC content, The Office, Premier League
Tubi (free)$0Older movies and TV, ad-supported

The most compelling competitor to Netflix in 2026 is Max, which carries HBO's prestige TV catalog (Succession, The White Lotus, The Last of Us), DC films, and a large Warner Bros movie library at essentially the same price. If forced to choose one, heavy drama viewers increasingly choose Max.

Who Netflix is genuinely worth it for in 2026

Worth it if: You watch Netflix Originals actively - if you're following multiple Netflix shows and find yourself thinking "I can't wait for the next season," you're getting value proportional to the cost. Families with kids who use Netflix's animated library daily get clear value. International content enthusiasts (K-dramas, Spanish-language series, Scandinavian crime) will find Netflix's global production investment genuinely differentiated.

Not worth it if: You primarily watch older network TV, sports, or content that lives on other platforms. If your Netflix usage is "scroll for 20 minutes and give up" three times a week, that's $15.49 for essentially nothing.

The honest test: Name five specific shows or films you want to watch on Netflix right now. If you can't - if you're keeping it because it feels like a necessity or because you might want it someday - that's subscription inertia, not value.

The rotation strategy

Netflix makes cancellation easy and resubscription instant, with no penalty and no waiting period. Your viewing history, profile preferences, and watchlist are all preserved for 10 months after cancellation. This makes a rotation strategy genuinely practical in a way it isn't for all services.

The move: subscribe when a show you want to watch is releasing new episodes, watch it, cancel. Resubscribe when the next thing comes out. At $15.49/month, two months per year on Netflix costs $30.98 instead of $185.88. For light viewers, this is a legitimate approach.

The catch: this requires the discipline to actually cancel rather than just meaning to. Set a calendar reminder for the day after you finish what you came for.

How to cancel Netflix

Netflix cancellation is unusually straightforward - one of the few major streaming services that makes it easy:

  1. Go to netflix.com and sign in
  2. Click your profile icon → Account
  3. Under Membership & Billing, click Cancel Membership
  4. Confirm - no retention screen, no chat required

Your access continues until the end of your current billing period. Netflix does not issue prorated refunds.