The days of being limited to theaters or DVD rentals are long gone. Today you can watch virtually any movie from any device. Here's every method available right now, organized by cost and convenience.
Public Library Streaming
Your library card unlocks two excellent streaming platforms: Kanopy (indie, documentary, and world cinema) and Hoopla (mainstream movies and TV). Completely free, no ads, and regularly updated. The best-kept secret in streaming that costs nothing.
Free Ad-Supported Platforms
Tubi, Pluto TV, Crackle, Peacock Free, The Roku Channel, and Kanopy (library card required) all offer movies at zero cost. The trade-off is advertising and a catalog weighted toward older titles, but the selection has improved dramatically. Tubi alone exceeds 50,000 titles.
Device Compatibility
Every major service works across web browsers, iOS, Android, smart TVs, Roku, Fire TV, Chromecast, and gaming consoles. For older TVs, a Fire TV Stick ($29.99) or Roku Express ($29.99) adds full smart TV functionality instantly and supports all major streaming apps.
Save With Bundles
The smart play is bundling where possible. Disney+/Hulu together runs $9.99/month — a significant discount. Amazon Prime includes Video. Apple frequently bundles TV+ with device purchases. T-Mobile and Verizon subscribers should check their plans for included streaming services they may be overlooking.
Rent or Buy Digital
New releases not yet on any subscription service can be rented or purchased through Apple TV, Google Play Movies, Amazon, YouTube, and Vudu. Rentals typically cost $3.99–$5.99 for a 48-hour viewing window. Purchases range from $9.99–$19.99 for permanent access.
Subscription Services
Netflix, Disney+, Max, Prime Video, Hulu, Apple TV+, Paramount+, and Peacock Premium represent the major paid tier. Monthly costs range from $5.99 to $22.99 depending on platform and plan. Most offer introductory deals or discounted first months to lower the entry barrier.