Tubi
280k titles, owned by Fox.
Biggest free catalog on the web. No account needed. Hollywood deals with Paramount, MGM, and Lionsgate keep new movies rolling in every month.
12 actually-free, actually-legal movie sites — owned by Fox, Paramount, Sony, Amazon, Roku, Google, and your public library. Most need no signup.
// The list
Ranked by catalog, freshness, and friction. Top three — Tubi, Pluto TV, Plex — start there.
280k titles, owned by Fox.
Biggest free catalog on the web. No account needed. Hollywood deals with Paramount, MGM, and Lionsgate keep new movies rolling in every month.
Live TV that costs nothing.
Paramount runs 250+ live channels plus an on-demand library from 175+ partners. Channel-flip the way you used to, but in your browser.
50k titles plus 1,100 free channels.
Originally a media server, now also a free streaming front. Real partnerships with MGM, Warner Bros., A24, and Lionsgate. Account is optional for the free tier.
No Roku device required.
Plays in any browser. Mix of Hollywood movies, originals, and a growing library of free live channels. Account optional.
Sony-backed cult classics + originals.
One of the original free streamers. Smaller catalog than Tubi, but heavier on Sony Pictures titles, '90s/'00s blockbusters, and Crackle Originals you can't get elsewhere for free.
Now baked into Prime Video with ads.
Amazon's free, ad-supported tier. Big originals like Bosch: Legacy and Jury Duty, plus a deep mainstream movie catalog. Needs an Amazon account but no payment.
The old Vudu Free, rebranded.
Rotating free-with-ads catalog from a major studio licensee. Strong on '80s, '90s, and 2000s movies you forgot you wanted to rewatch.
Indies, classics, no friction.
Criterion-tier movies via your library card.
Funded by public libraries and universities. Signs you in with your library card, then gives you 5–30 plays/month of arthouse, foreign, and Criterion Collection films. No ads.
Mainstream movies, library card login.
Public domain classics, zero ads.
Curated free-with-ads features on YouTube.
// Browser-first
Some free streamers push you toward an app — Roku Channel and Freevee work best on a TV, Pluto TV nags you to install. The six below play straight in Chrome, Safari, or Firefox with zero install and (mostly) zero account. Open a tab, hit play.
280k titles, owned by Fox.
No signup · Browser playback
50k titles plus 1,100 free channels.
Browser playback
Sony-backed cult classics + originals.
No signup · Browser playback
Indies, classics, no friction.
No signup · Browser playback
Public domain classics, zero ads.
No signup · Browser playback
Curated free-with-ads features on YouTube.
Browser playback
// Live TV vs on-demand
The free streaming world splits into two formats: FAST channels (free ad-supported streaming TV — like cable, but free) and on-demand AVOD (pick a movie, hit play). Most of the majors do both. Here's the side-by-side.
| Site | Live TV | On-Demand | Sign-Up | Parent |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pluto TV | 250+ channels | Yes | No | Paramount |
| The Roku Channel | 350+ channels | Yes | Optional | Roku |
| Plex Live | 1,100+ channels | 50,000+ titles | Optional | Plex Inc. |
| Amazon Freevee | Limited | Yes | Amazon account | Amazon |
| Crackle | No | Yes | No | Sony / CSSE |
| Tubi | 200+ channels | 280,000+ titles | No | Fox |
When to pick which: live channels are better when you don't know what you want — Pluto TV's Sci-Fi 2000s channel will pick a movie for you. On-demand wins when you do — Tubi's catalog has 280,000 titles you can search.
// Questions
The five strongest free movie websites in 2026 are Tubi (Fox-owned, 280,000+ titles), Pluto TV (Paramount, 250+ live channels), Plex Free (50,000+ titles plus deals with MGM and A24), The Roku Channel (browser-playable originals and live), and Crackle (Sony-backed classics and originals). All five are legal, ad-supported, and need no payment. Tubi, Pluto TV, and Crackle don't even require an account.
Free movie websites are services that legally license movies from studios and stream them to you for free, paid for by ads instead of a subscription. The industry calls this AVOD (advertising-supported video on demand) or, when channels are scheduled like cable, FAST (free ad-supported streaming TV). Tubi, Pluto TV, Plex, Crackle, and Amazon Freevee all run on this model. You watch a few short ads, the studio gets paid, and you don't reach for a credit card.
Pick by what you want to watch. Tubi is the best overall — the largest catalog, no signup, and modern hits show up regularly. Pluto TV wins for lean-back, channel-surfing nostalgia. Plex Free is the deepest catalog if you'll create an account, with the strongest studio partnerships. For arthouse and Criterion, Kanopy via your library card beats every paid service. Want zero ads? Hoopla and Kanopy are the only legit answers.
Legitimate free movie websites are 100% legal. Tubi, Pluto TV, Plex, Crackle, Roku Channel, Freevee, Kanopy, Hoopla, Internet Archive, and YouTube's free movies catalog all license their content from rights holders. The illegal ones are pirate streamers — sites that copy movies without licensing them. They're easy to spot: tons of pop-ups, fake video players, demands to install software, and movies that are still in theaters. Stick to the 12 sites we list and you're fine.
Safe free movie websites have three things: a known parent company (Fox, Paramount, Sony, Amazon, Roku, Google, your public library), HTTPS in the URL, and a real ad business model — short pre-rolls and mid-rolls, not pop-ups or fake download buttons. Tubi, Pluto TV, Plex, Crackle, Roku Channel, Freevee, Fandango at Home, Popcornflix, Kanopy, Hoopla, Internet Archive, and YouTube all pass that bar. Anything that asks you to install a player, disable your antivirus, or sign up before showing the catalog is a red flag.
We add new sites monthly after testing. Submit yours — we'll vet it for safety, legality, and ad load before it goes on the list.
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