The Spring 2026 anime season has been a strong one. Akane-banashi turned a 400-year-old Japanese storytelling art into a shonen battle of performance, Snowball Earth quietly became one of the most overlooked mecha shows in years, and the Mobile Suit Gundam Hathaway sequel is heading for the biggest anime movie weekend of the year. The catch on Android is that no single streaming app holds all of it. We compared seven anime streaming apps to figure out which one to start with, which one to add on a discount, and which free option is worth keeping on the home screen.
What to look for in an anime streaming app
Anime apps look interchangeable on the surface. The real differences:
- Catalogue size and depth. Crunchyroll holds the largest licensed simulcast catalogue. Netflix wins on exclusives like Devilman Crybaby, Pluto, and Aggretsuko. HIDIVE keeps classics nobody else carries.
- Subs vs dubs. Crunchyroll and Funimation lead on English dubs. Netflix dubs vary by region and license. Bilibili’s English-language catalogue leans subbed.
- Simulcast windows. Crunchyroll usually runs day-and-date with Japanese broadcasts. Hulu and Prime Video lag by a season for most titles.
- Offline downloads. Crunchyroll Mega Fan, Netflix Standard and above, HIDIVE, and Prime Video all support downloads. Bilibili supports downloads in some regions.
- Ads. Crunchyroll runs a free ad-supported tier in many markets. Netflix has a Standard with ads plan. Bilibili and YouTube are ad-supported by default.
- Region locks. Most apps gate content by region. Bilibili’s international app holds different titles than the Mainland China version.
Quick comparison
| App | Best for | Catalogue | Free tier | Starting price | Aptoide |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Crunchyroll | Simulcasts and dubs | Largest licensed | Yes (ads) | About $8/mo Fan | Yes |
| Netflix | Anime exclusives and films | Mixed | No | About $7/mo with ads | Yes |
| HIDIVE | Classics and niche titles | Curated catalogue | Trial | About $5/mo | Yes |
| Funimation | English dub library | Funimation library | No | Now folded into Crunchyroll in most regions | Yes |
| Amazon Prime Video | Bundled with Prime | Mixed | With Prime trial | About $9/mo or with Prime | Yes |
| Bilibili | Asia-first free catalogue | Asian originals plus licensed | Yes | Premium available | Yes |
| YouTube | Free legal anime channels | Selected studios | Yes | YouTube Premium optional | Yes |
The 7 best anime streaming apps for Android
1. Crunchyroll — best overall
Crunchyroll is the default for anime streaming in 2026. The largest licensed catalogue, simulcasts that go up minutes after Japanese broadcasts, the broadest dub roster, and a manga library bundled into the higher Mega Fan plan. The Android app supports downloads, picture-in-picture, and casting, and the ad-supported free tier covers a chunk of the catalogue in many regions.
Where it falls short: The free tier delays new episodes by a week behind the paywall. Some classic and licensed Funimation titles are still being merged in across regions.
Pricing:
- Free: Ad-supported subset of the catalogue
- Paid: Fan and Mega Fan tiers from about eight dollars a month, annual saves
Platforms: Android, iOS, web, smart TVs, consoles
Bottom line: Start here. Most weeks the simulcast you want is here first.
2. Netflix — best for anime films and exclusives
Netflix keeps growing its anime spend. Originals like Devilman Crybaby, Aggretsuko, Pluto, and Cyberpunk Edgerunners live here, and the studio output continues with Studio Trigger collaborations. The Android app’s download and dub support is the most polished on the list.
Where it falls short: Catalogue depth on long-running shonen runs thin. Simulcasts are rare. Regional differences are large.
Pricing:
- Free: None
- Paid: Standard with ads from about seven dollars a month, ad-free Standard about fifteen dollars, Premium higher
Platforms: Android, iOS, web, smart TVs, consoles
Bottom line: Add Netflix when an exclusive lands. Cancel between drops.
3. HIDIVE — best for classics and niche titles
HIDIVE is the curated catalogue. The library mixes long-running classics with niche titles that none of the larger services carry, including a strong selection of older Sentai Filmworks dubs. The Android app is straightforward and supports offline downloads at every tier.
Where it falls short: Catalogue depth is narrower than Crunchyroll. Player UI is functional rather than polished.
Pricing:
- Free: Trial period
- Paid: From about five dollars a month, with an annual discount
Platforms: Android, iOS, web, smart TVs, consoles
Bottom line: The catalogue pick. Add HIDIVE as the second app when your wishlist runs into older or harder-to-find titles.
4. Funimation — best legacy dub catalogue
Funimation is in the middle of a long handover into Crunchyroll. In several regions the standalone app continues to host the legacy dub library while titles cross-publish. If you bought into Funimation’s catalogue years ago, the app still works and downloads still play.
Where it falls short: The catalogue is shrinking as titles move to Crunchyroll. Some regions have closed the standalone service entirely. New subscribers should sign up on Crunchyroll instead.
Pricing:
- Free: Limited where the service is still active
- Paid: Folded into Crunchyroll subscriptions in most markets
Platforms: Android, iOS where supported, web, smart TVs
Bottom line: Keep the Funimation app if you have an existing library. New viewers should pick Crunchyroll.
5. Amazon Prime Video — best as part of a Prime subscription
Amazon Prime Video has rotated several major anime titles in and out, including catalogue picks like Vinland Saga’s first season. If you already pay for Prime, the value floor is low because the streaming is part of the bundle.
Where it falls short: The anime catalogue is selective rather than exhaustive. UI categories bury anime under generic genre rows.
Pricing:
- Free: With Prime trial
- Paid: Bundled in Prime, standalone Video plan available
Platforms: Android, iOS, web, smart TVs, consoles
Bottom line: Worth it as part of Prime, not as a standalone anime subscription.
6. Bilibili — best free Asia-first catalogue
Bilibili is the international version of the Chinese video platform, with a focused anime and donghua catalogue available outside Mainland China. A surprising amount of content runs free with ads, including older licensed simulcasts and Bilibili-funded originals.
Where it falls short: Catalogue varies sharply by region. The interface mixes anime with other Asian video formats, and search can feel cluttered.
Pricing:
- Free: Ad supported
- Paid: Premium tiers available in select markets
Platforms: Android, iOS, web
Bottom line: Best free pick if you watch a mix of anime and donghua and accept regional variance.
7. YouTube — best free legal anime
YouTube hosts more legal anime than most viewers realise. Studio channels like Muse Asia in Southeast Asia, Ani-One Asia, and Crunchyroll’s own free episode uploads run ad supported with no sign-up. YouTube Premium removes ads and unlocks background playback for picture-in-picture sessions.
Where it falls short: Catalogue depends on rights holders posting episodes. Region locks cut titles off without warning. New episodes do not arrive in any predictable order.
Pricing:
- Free: Ad supported
- Paid: YouTube Premium optional, around ten to fourteen dollars a month
Platforms: Android, iOS, web, smart TVs
Bottom line: Keep it on the home screen. Free legal anime hides in plain sight.
How to pick the right one
Pick Crunchyroll if you can only afford one. The simulcast cadence, dub library, and catalogue depth make it the default.
Pick Netflix when an exclusive lands. The originals roster is small but high impact.
Pick HIDIVE if your wishlist leans toward classics and titles that nobody else carries.
Pick Amazon Prime Video if you already pay for Prime. Treat the anime catalogue as a bonus.
Pick Bilibili if you watch a mix of anime and donghua and prefer free content over a polished catalogue.
Use YouTube as the topping. Free episodes from Muse Asia, Ani-One Asia, and Crunchyroll’s official channel surface real content with zero commitment.
The Funimation app is for legacy subscribers, not new sign-ups.
FAQ
What is the best free anime app for Android?
Bilibili and YouTube are the two strongest free legal options. Crunchyroll also runs an ad-supported free tier in many regions covering most of the catalogue with a one-week delay.
Can I watch anime offline on Android?
Yes, Crunchyroll Mega Fan, Netflix Standard and above, HIDIVE, and Prime Video all support offline downloads. Bilibili supports downloads in some regions.
Which app has the most anime simulcasts?
Crunchyroll. It runs day-and-date with Japanese broadcasts for most licensed series.
Is Funimation still available?
The Funimation service has been folded into Crunchyroll in most markets. Existing accounts continue to work where the standalone app is supported, but new sign-ups go to Crunchyroll.
What is the best anime app for dubs?
Crunchyroll has the largest English dub catalogue after absorbing Funimation. Netflix’s dubs are competitive for its originals.