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Netflix

4.2
CategoryEntertainment
Download1B+
PriceSubscription required
RatedTeen
RequiresAndroid 8.0+
DeveloperNetflix, Inc.

Screenshots

Netflix screenshot
Netflix screenshot
Netflix screenshot
Netflix screenshot
Netflix screenshot
Netflix screenshot

About this app

Roughly 300 million households pay for Netflix, which makes its Android app one of the most-used pieces of entertainment software in existence. The company that started mailing DVDs in the late 1990s now spends more than ten billion dollars a year on content, and its originals, from prestige dramas to reality filler, dominate weekly streaming charts across most markets it operates in.

The app itself is competent and rarely gets in the way: profiles, downloads for offline viewing, and playback that adapts sensibly to weak mobile connections. What has changed is the deal around it. Password sharing between households was shut down in 2023, a cheaper ad-supported plan replaced the old entry tier, and prices have climbed steadily. Netflix remains a strong service; it has simply stopped pretending to be a generous one.

Offline viewing on commutes and flights

Downloads are the app's best mobile feature. Most of the catalogue can be saved over Wi-Fi at selectable quality, and Smart Downloads automatically deletes watched episodes and fetches the next one. Licensing puts expiry timers on some titles, so download close to the trip.

Household viewing with separate profiles

Up to five profiles per account keep watch histories, recommendations, and My List separate. Kids profiles restrict content by maturity rating and use a simplified interface, and a PIN can lock adult profiles so children cannot wander into them.

Included mobile games

Every subscription includes a catalogue of mobile games with no ads or in-app purchases, installed as separate apps but unlocked through your Netflix login. The library includes genuinely good titles, and it remains one of the least-known perks of the subscription.

Adaptive streaming

Playback quality scales with connection strength, and a data saver option stretches mobile plans further. Higher tiers unlock 4K and HDR where hardware supports it; the ad plan and the standard plan top out at 1080p on most content.

Downloads and Smart Downloads

Save titles to the device or an SD card, choose the quality per download, and let Smart Downloads rotate episodes for you. Simultaneous-download and device limits depend on plan tier, which is worth checking before a family trip.

Profiles and parental controls

Per-profile maturity ratings, specific title blocks, profile PINs, and a viewing-history page parents can audit. The controls are more granular than most rivals offer, though they only work if the adult profiles are actually locked.

Continue watching everywhere

Progress syncs across phone, TV, and browser within moments, and the phone app doubles as a remote for the TV app on the same network. The row of half-finished shows can be edited, a small mercy Netflix took years to add.

Privacy & Data Safety

Netflix knows exactly what you watch, when you pause, what you abandon after ten minutes, and which artwork made you click, and it uses that behavioural record to drive recommendations, content commissioning, and, on the ad-supported plan, advertising. There is no anonymous mode; every stream is tied to a paid account with billing details. By streaming standards the company has had few security scandals, but the depth of viewing profiling deserves clear eyes.

  • The ad-supported plan brings advertising technology into the app, with targeting informed by viewing activity and account information; pricier tiers carry no ads and less ad-related processing.
  • Household enforcement checks IP addresses and device activity to decide whether a device belongs to your primary household, which means location-linked data is actively used to police account sharing.
  • Viewing history is visible and editable per profile, and deleting an item also removes it from recommendation inputs after a delay.
  • Kids profiles carry no ads regardless of plan tier, and Netflix publishes maturity ratings and content warnings per title, though enforcement inside a household depends entirely on PIN discipline.

Advantages

  • Deep, constantly refreshed catalogue with strong original productions
  • Reliable downloads with automatic episode management
  • Included mobile games without ads or in-app purchases
  • Granular parental controls and per-profile PINs

Updates

The Android app updates every week or two, but visible changes are rare because experiments and interface tweaks are switched on server-side for slices of the user base. Netflix is known for relentless A/B testing, so your home screen may differ from another subscriber's on the same version. Bigger shifts, like the ads plan and games, arrived as account-level features rather than app releases.

  • Buildout of the advertising tier, including its in-house ad technology and expanded ad formats
  • Continued investment in mobile games and testing of cloud-streamed titles beyond phones
  • Live programming such as sports and event broadcasts, with mobile playback improvements to match

Editor's Assessment

Our verdict

Judged purely as an Android app, Netflix is one of the best-engineered streaming clients available: downloads, profiles, and playback all simply work. Judged as a service, the value question is harder than it was five years ago, with higher prices, household policing, and an ad tier that reintroduces the tracking economics streaming once promised to escape. If the current slate of originals appeals to you, subscribe for a few months, binge deliberately, and remember that cancelling and returning later is always on the table.

What works

  • Deep, constantly refreshed catalogue with strong original productions
  • Reliable downloads with automatic episode management
  • Included mobile games without ads or in-app purchases
  • Granular parental controls and per-profile PINs

What to know

  • No free tier at all, and prices have risen repeatedly
  • Password-sharing crackdown charges extra for members outside the household
  • Beloved shows are cancelled with a frequency fans find exhausting
  • Ad-supported tier lacks a small portion of the catalogue and adds tracking

FAQ

Is there any way to use Netflix for free?

No. Netflix discontinued free trials in most countries years ago, and every plan requires payment from day one. The ad-supported plan is the cheapest entry point. Any app or site promising free Netflix access is either piracy or a credential-stealing scam, and shared logins now trigger household verification.

How does the password-sharing rule actually work?

Netflix ties each account to a primary household, detected through IP address and device activity. Devices used regularly elsewhere may be asked to verify or be added as a paid extra member, where that option exists. Travelling with your own devices is fine; long-term use in a second home is what triggers enforcement.

What is different about the ad-supported plan?

It costs several dollars less per month and inserts a few minutes of ads per hour, mostly before and during playback. A small slice of the catalogue is unavailable for licensing reasons, download rights are more limited, and your viewing data helps target the ads. For light viewers the maths often still favours it.

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