Damian McCarthy’s Oddity is one of a handful of recent horror films that earned a wide audience without a major studio behind it, and it spent most of its life on streaming services rather than in theatres. Finding the films that matter in the genre is now an exercise in knowing where to look. These seven Android streaming apps cover the spread, from horror-only catalogs like Shudder to the freebie pile on Tubi to the niche corners of the big four. Each one is tested for download support, casting reliability, and how much of its catalog actually rotates in or out month to month.
What to look for in a horror streaming app
A horror catalog is only worth subscribing to if the app behaves well on the couch:
- Catalog depth in the genre. A streaming service with three Halloween classics and 12 generic thrillers is not a horror service. Look for depth across slasher, supernatural, found footage, body horror, and folk subgenres.
- Download support. Horror is the genre most ruined by ad breaks. Premium tiers usually disable ads, but downloads matter for travel and for offline night viewing.
- Cast and TV-out. The app should cast cleanly to a Chromecast or stream natively to an Android TV without dropping subtitle settings.
- Subtitle quality. Good subtitle handling is essential for foreign horror (Korean, Spanish, Japanese), where so much of the genre’s modern strength lives.
- Profile separation. Horror in a shared household needs a profile that does not push slasher posters at the kid’s profile.
Quick comparison
| App | Best for | Free tier | Downloads | Aptoide |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Netflix | Big-budget horror series | No | Yes (paid) | Yes |
| Shudder | Curated horror catalog | Trial | Yes | Yes |
| Tubi | Free horror back-catalog | Free with ads | No | No |
| Plex | Personal library + free films | Free | Server-dependent | Yes |
| Prime Video | Big mix with horror channels | No | Yes | Yes |
| Peacock | NBCU horror franchises | Limited free | Yes | Yes |
| Crunchyroll | Anime horror | Free with ads | Yes | Yes |
The 7 best horror streaming apps for Android in 2026
1. Netflix — best for big-budget horror series
Netflix is still the streamer commissioning the most expensive horror originals. The recent Mike Flanagan series, the steady stream of Korean and Japanese horror imports, and the long shelf of Stranger Things adjacent shows give the catalog more genre weight than a casual scroll suggests. Profile-level Mature ratings keep horror posters off shared family screens.
The Android app handles 4K, HDR, and downloads cleanly on tablets and phones with the requisite hardware support.
Where it falls short: No free tier; the cheapest plan in the US is now ad-supported. Catalog rotation removes titles regularly, sometimes mid-watch. Older horror classics rotate in and out unpredictably.
Pricing:
- Standard with ads: about $7.99/month.
- Standard: about $17.99/month.
- Premium (4K): about $24.99/month.
Platforms: Android, iOS, Android TV, Smart TVs, web.
Bottom line: The first stop for prestige horror originals and trending series.
2. Shudder — best curated horror catalog
Shudder by AMC Networks is the streaming service built for horror fans. The catalog covers slashers, supernatural, body horror, J-horror, French extreme, found footage, folk, and grindhouse, and the editorial team rotates seasonal collections (Halloween, Final Girls Spring, 61 Days of Halloween) that make finding something worth watching faster than scrolling Netflix’s vague genre rows. The Last Drive-In with Joe Bob Briggs continues to run as a streaming-native horror programming block.
Original commissions (Late Night with the Devil, V/H/S series, the recent Sthenno) sit alongside thousands of older imports.
Where it falls short: Not a casual streaming service. If you do not watch horror most weeks, the value collapses. Catalog availability varies by country. The Android app’s interface is functional but feels less polished than the bigger services.
Pricing:
- Monthly: about $6.99/month.
- Annual: about $59.99/year.
- Free 7-day trial.
Platforms: Android, iOS, Android TV, Roku, Apple TV, Fire TV, web.
Bottom line: Required if horror is your main genre. The curation alone is worth the monthly price.
3. Tubi — best free horror back-catalog
Tubi is the Fox-owned, ad-supported streamer with one of the deepest free horror catalogs anywhere. Forgotten 80s slashers, B-grade creature features, regional horror, and surprisingly polished newer indies sit on the same shelf. The personalisation surfaces films within a couple of clicks once the algorithm knows you skip the first 10 minutes of any non-horror trailer.
It is the right place to find the kind of horror that does not justify a Shudder license and was never going to make Netflix.
Where it falls short: Ad load is heavy. Downloads are not supported. The app interface puts horror behind multiple genre filters rather than featuring it. Subtitle handling on foreign films is inconsistent.
Pricing:
- Free with ads, no subscription option.
Platforms: Android, iOS, Android TV, Roku, Fire TV, web, console, Smart TVs.
Bottom line: Free, ad-supported, and surprisingly deep. Install it as a backup for nights when nothing on the paid services looks right.
4. Plex — best for free films and personal libraries
Plex does double duty: it streams from a personal media server (a NAS or a home PC running the Plex Media Server) and also serves a free, ad-supported catalog through Plex On Us. The free catalog is similar to Tubi’s in scope, with a respectable horror section. The personal-library side is the real reason to install Plex, since it is the most reliable way to watch DVD rips and digital purchases on the phone.
The Discover hub aggregates results across services, including Shudder, Tubi, and Prime Video, which is helpful when you remember a film title but cannot recall where you saw it.
Where it falls short: Setting up a personal server takes time and requires a NAS, an old PC, or a Raspberry Pi. The Android app’s free Plex On Us catalog has heavier ad breaks than Tubi. Plex’s product roadmap has wandered between consumer and pro audiences.
Pricing:
- Free for the basic app and Plex On Us.
- Plex Pass: about $4.99/month, $39.99/year, or $119.99 lifetime, unlocks server features.
Platforms: Android, iOS, Android TV, Smart TVs, web, desktop, console.
Bottom line: The right pick if you have a personal media library, with a usable free streaming catalog as a bonus.
5. Prime Video — best big-mix service with horror add-ons
Prime Video carries a base catalog of horror and bundles add-on subscriptions (MGM+, AMC+, the rotating horror channels) that extend it significantly. For a Prime member already paying for the membership, the included horror roster is wide enough to keep most casual viewers busy, and the add-on system avoids paying for a full second app subscription.
The Android app handles X-Ray cast information, which is genuinely useful for the supporting-actor “where do I know them from” question that horror watching produces every night.
Where it falls short: The interface buries horror behind generic categories. Add-on subscriptions stack and can become more expensive than Netflix without anyone noticing. Some titles labelled as included shift to rental without warning.
Pricing:
- Bundled with Amazon Prime: about $14.99/month for Prime in the US.
- Standalone Prime Video: about $8.99/month.
- AMC+ add-on: about $8.99/month.
Platforms: Android, iOS, Android TV, Fire TV, web, console, Smart TVs.
Bottom line: Worth using if Prime is in your budget already. Add an AMC+ pass during October.
6. Peacock — best for NBCUniversal horror franchises
Peacock holds the streaming rights to most of the NBCUniversal horror back-catalog (the Halloween series, Universal’s monster films, much of the Blumhouse output) and has been quietly expanding original horror programming. The free tier carries a slice of the catalog with ads, which makes it cheap to test.
Live-event support adds value for the streaming Halloween marathons that the network runs each year.
Where it falls short: Free tier is limited and contains ads. The app has historically had stability issues on Android TV, although the past year of updates has been better. Premium pricing competes with services that have wider general catalogs.
Pricing:
- Premium with ads: about $7.99/month.
- Premium Plus: about $13.99/month, ad-free with downloads.
- Limited free tier with ads.
Platforms: Android, iOS, Android TV, Roku, Apple TV, Fire TV, web, Smart TVs.
Bottom line: The home of Universal’s horror library. Use the free tier first to check coverage in your country.
7. Crunchyroll — best for anime horror
Crunchyroll is the only major streamer with a full anime horror selection. Series like Shiki, Higurashi When They Cry, Junji Ito Maniac, Parasyte, and Devilman Crybaby live alongside more recent additions. The simulcast model means new horror anime episodes drop within hours of the Japan broadcast.
The Android app handles dub/sub switching, fast forward, and casting on a wide range of TVs.
Where it falls short: Outside the anime category there is nothing here. Free tier carries ads. Some catalog rotation between regions can pull series mid-season.
Pricing:
- Free with ads.
- Fan: about $7.99/month.
- Mega Fan: about $11.99/month, includes simultaneous streams and downloads.
Platforms: Android, iOS, Android TV, web, console, Smart TVs.
Bottom line: The right install if anime horror is a real part of your watchlist.
How to pick the right horror streamer
- For prestige horror and big-budget series: Netflix.
- For deep horror curation: Shudder.
- For free horror without a subscription: Tubi.
- For a personal library plus free films: Plex.
- For Prime members who want a horror add-on: Prime Video plus AMC+.
- For Universal classics and Blumhouse output: Peacock.
- For anime horror: Crunchyroll.
A common stack: Shudder all year, plus rotating Netflix or Peacock through October, plus Tubi or Plex as the free fallback.
Frequently asked questions
What is the best app for horror movies?
For curated horror, Shudder. The catalog is built around the genre and the editorial collections cover most subgenres deeply. For free horror, Tubi or Plex On Us. For prestige originals, Netflix. Many horror viewers run Shudder year-round and add a second service during October.
Is Shudder worth it?
Shudder is worth subscribing to if you watch horror weekly. The library is significantly deeper in the genre than any general-purpose streamer, and the editorial collections shorten the time between opening the app and starting a film. For occasional horror watching, the rotating offerings on Netflix or the free tier on Tubi cover the same need without a paid commitment.
Are there free horror streaming apps for Android?
Yes. Tubi has the largest free horror catalog with no subscription. Plex On Us inside the Plex app is similar. Crunchyroll has a free tier for anime horror. Peacock’s free tier carries some titles but is limited compared to its paid plan.
Can I download horror movies for offline watching on Android?
Yes, on Netflix (paid plans), Shudder, Prime Video, Peacock Premium Plus, and Crunchyroll Mega Fan. Tubi and the free tier of Plex On Us do not support offline downloads. Personal-library Plex (your own server) supports downloads through Plex Pass.