Are you looking for the best horror movies streaming on Netflix right now? It’s as wild and as varied as a film genre gets — from indie stories of terror to digital features of killing to high-brow masterpieces about evil — and whatever the brand of horror you’re in the mood for, there’s something on the service for you.
So let’s take a look at the best scary new releases in horror to stream on Netflix right now, including recent additions like The Blackcoat’s Daughter and It Comes at Night to all-time horror classics like Candyman and Rosemary’s Baby. This list features horror for fans of all kinds to watch, whether it’s Halloween or not! The newest additions to the list will be added at the top and marked with an asterisk.
Oh, and when you’re done here, be sure to also read our list of the 100 Best Horror Movies Ever and what’s new to Netflix this month.
[widget path=”global/article/imagegallery” parameters=”albumSlug=the-best-horror-movies-on-netflix&captions=true”]
Best Movies on Netflix by Genre:
- Best sci-fi movies on Netflix
- Best comedy movies on Netflix
- Best drama movies on Netflix
- Best action movies on Netflix
- Best horror TV shows on Netflix
- Best anime series on Netflix
Please note: This list pertains to U.S. Netflix subscribers. Some titles may not currently be available on international platforms. This article is frequently amended to remove films no longer on Netflix and to include more horror films that are now available on the service.
The Blackcoat’s Daughter (2015)*
If it’s a horror film distributed by A24, it’s probably worth watching. The Blackcoat’s Daughter may not have garnered as much attention as other A24 releases like The Witch, but it’s a great example of a psychological thriller that avoids the usual cliches and jump scares of most modern horror movies. Emma Roberts and Lucy Boynton star as two boarding school students who stay behind over the holiday break and discover their teachers may actually be Satanists, though the plot takes quite a few turns from there.
Read our The Blackcoat’s Daughter review or watch The Blackcoat’s Daughter on Netflix.
It Comes at Night (2017)
One of the great truths of horror is that what you can’t see is infinitely more terrifying than what you can see. Too few horror movies seem to understand that, but at least there’s It Comes at Night. This is a post-apocalyptic horror movie that does a whole lot with very little. It’s set in the middle of a global pandemic, but focuses solely on a single family struggling to stay alive in a remote cabin. The oppressive darkness and uncertainty surrounding the plague and its victims make for a frighteningly good ride.
Read our It Comes at Night review or watch It Comes at Night on Netflix.
Rosemary’s Baby (1968)
Netflix’s horror library just got a big boost now that one of the most critically acclaimed horror films of all time has been added. Rosemary’s Baby‘s impeccably well-made on all fronts. It’s a true showcase for director Roman Polanski’s keen eye. The score is terrific. But most of all, the movie features a real tour de force performance from star Mia Farrow. That’s essential for a movie all about the terror facing an expecting mother as she realizes something is seriously wrong with her neighbors. This movie remains so impactful because, beneath all the Satanist trappings, the scares are all too real.
Watch Rosemary’s Baby on Netflix.
Hush (2016)
This Netflix Original tackles a familiar horror sub-genre (the home invasion thriller) with a fun new wrinkle. Kate Siegel stars as a reclusive writer who also happens to be deaf-mute. That disability proves life-threatening when a murderous stalker begins hunting her. Hush is incredibly suspenseful and uses its premises to maximum effect. It was one of the earliest signs that Netflix is a true force to be reckoned with when it comes to original horror films.
In the Tall Grass (2019)
One of the newer additions to the Netflix horror library, In the Tall Grass has quite a strong pedigree. It’s based on a novella written by Stephen King and his son Joe Hill, is directed by Cube and Splice director Vincenzo Natali and stars The Conjuring’s Patrick Wilson. It also boasts a simple and effective premise. Innocent people are lured into a cornfield when they hear screams, only to find escape very difficult indeed. The movie sometimes struggles to pad out that premise into a feature-length plot, but this one is still well worth checking out.
Watch In the Tall Grass on Netflix.
Insidious (2011)
Not only is Netflix home to The Conjuring, it also has the horror film without which that blockbuster franchise wouldn’t exist. Insidious is another case of a familiar sub-genre (in this case the haunted house movie) being reinvigorated through tight plotting and clever execution. Patrick Wilson and Rose Byrne star as a hapless couple who move into their new home and suddenly find their son becoming a vessel for the spirits trapped there.
Read our Insidious review or watch The Conjuring on Netflix.
Under the Shadow (2016)
This universally acclaimed, Persian-language horror film is a must-watch for horror fans with a Netflix subscription. Set in the 1980s in post-revolutionary Tehran, Under the Shadow stars Narges Rashidi as a woman grappling with both the ordinary pressures of living under an oppressive regime and some decidedly supernatural shenanigans in her apartment building. Like so many great horror films, Under the Shadow manages to provide both insightful social commentary and spine-tingling horror.
Watch Under the Shadow on Netflix.
Would You Rather (2012)
If Hostel isn’t enough, Would You Rather is another worthwhile addition to the divisive “torture porn” genre. This one boasts an especially strong premise, with Brittney Snow starring as a struggling woman trying to care for her terminally ill brother. She’s approached by a wealthy philanthropist (Jeffrey Combs) with an intriguing offer – participate in a friendly game of “Would You Rather?” and her brother’s treatment will be paid in full. Naturally, that game involves far more than its participants could have imagined.
Watch Would You Rather on Netflix.
Fractured (2019)
Similar to 2018’s Bird Box, Fractured is a Netflix-exclusive horror movie that managed to make a major splash on social media. The film’s twist ending has certainly created a major stir. Fractured stars Sam Worthington as a man whose wife and daughter disappear in a hospital, sending him on a desperate quest to prove they ever actually existed in the first place. Is he just crazy, or is there something more sinister at play?
Candyman (1992)
Bernard Rose’s 1992 horror flick (adapted from a Clive Barker short story) is basically the thinking man’s slasher movie. Candyman packs in all the gore and scares fans of Friday the 13th and A Nightmare on Elm Street could ask for. But at the same time, it takes a more cerebral approach to the genre, one heavily rooted in the racially charged history of its Chicago setting. Tony Todd’s titular character may well be the most sympathetic slasher villain ever.
1922 (2017)
Like Gerald’s Game, 1922 strongly suggests that Netflix may be the best home for Stephen King adaptations. King veteran Thomas Jane stars as a tortured farmer confessing to an unspeakable crime. He convinced his own son to murder his soon-to-be ex-wife in order to save the family farm. James delivers a career-best performance in a film that’s less about overt scares than it is wallowing in pure human misery.
Read our 1922 review or watch 1922 on Netflix.
Apostle (2018)
It may not be the follow-up to The Raid 2 fans were expecting, but Apostle proves that Gareth Evans has a flair for more than just martial arts movies. This period drama carries strong echoes of The Wicker Man (the good version), casting Dan Stevens as a man posing as a new recruit to a dangerous cult in the hope of rescuing his captive sister. Needless to say, the film goes to some pretty strange and terrible places by the time that journey wraps up.
Read our Apostle review or watch Apostle on Netflix.
Green Room (2015)
We’re used to Patrick Stewart playing some of the noblest heroes in pop culture, including Professor X and Captain Picard. That makes his unexpected turn as a Neo-Nazi gang leader here all the more memorable. Green Room is basically a survival horror movie, with the members of a traveling punk band finding themselves fighting for freedom after witnessing a bit too much at their latest gig. As director Jeremy Saulnier’s followup to Blue Ruin, it’s a very different but no less compelling indie horror film.
Read our Green Room review or watch Green Room on Netflix.
Cult of Chucky (2017)
There’s a bit of Child’s Play/Chucky renaissance going on right now, with a reboot (featuring the voice of Mark Hamill as Chucky!) recently hitting theaters, a TV series from franchise creator Don Mancini, and then the ongoing series of sequels to the original 1988 film about the killer doll. As we said in our Cult of Chucky review, “Too many horror sequels feel like cheap and soulless cash-ins. Cult of Chucky has big ideas, strong performances and some moments that rank among the best in the series. The other classic slasher franchises may be failing, but lately, Chucky is making entertaining horror sequels look like child’s play.”
Watch Cult of Chucky on Netflix.
The Autopsy of Jane Doe (2016)
One of the creepiest and most original horror movies in years, The Autopsy of Jane Doe stars Brian Cox and Emile Hirsch as a father-son team of morticians who are tasked with performing an autopsy on a mysterious corpse that turned up at an inexplicable crime scene. As they dissect the body they discover one impossible medical mystery after another, until they find too late that the horrors haven’t stopped now that “Jane Doe” is dead. it’s suspenseful, fascinating, and scary as heck.
Read our The Autopsy of Jane Doe review or watch The Autopsy of Jane Doe on Netflix.
Pan’s Labyrinth (2006)
Guillermo del Toro’s Oscar-winning dark fairy tale tells the story of a young girl in early Francoist Spain, as she retreats into a world of horrifying magic to escape her fascist, violent new stepfather. Her world is so grim that even her imagination is tainted, and her childhood fantasy life more closely resembles a waking nightmare, filled with gruesome monsters and cruel temptations. Pan’s Labyrinth is haunting, earnest, and beautifully eerie.
Read our Pan’s Labyrinth review or watch Pan’s Labyrinth on Netflix.
The Witch (2015)
A family that’s too Puritan for 1630s colonial America, which was spectacularly Puritan, is forced to live on their own, on the outskirts of the world. Grief, deception, hypocrisy and religious paranoia take hold, and the family starts tearing each other apart. Robert Eggers’ instant, modern classic The Witch is a masterpiece of mood, and captures the historical era with immersive specificity. You’ll feel like you’re trapped on this farm with these people, and going mad right alongside them.
Read our The Witch review or watch The Witch on Netflix.
Gerald’s Game (2017)
Carla Gugino travels to an isolated cabin with her husband to spice up their marriage, but he dies while she’s handcuffed to the bed, and now she’s trapped, starving, and staring down a feral dog that’s found its way into the house. Mike Flanagan’s impeccably constructed adaptation of the Stephen King novel Gerald’s Game is a suspenseful film, but also a bravura showcase for Gugino’s incredible acting talents.
Read our Gerald’s Game review or watch Gerald’s Game on Netflix.
The Invitation (2015)
Logan Marshall-Green is invited to his ex-wife’s house for a dinner party, but there’s something… off. He can’t quite put his finger on it but there are suspicious little details everywhere, and director Karyn Kusama skillfully keeps us on a knife edge the whole movie, wondering what the heck is really going on. The Invitation is a subtle horror thriller, but if you like a movie with a slow burn, and impressive psychological insight, it’s a must-see.
Read our The Invitation review or watch The Invitation on Netflix.
Train to Busan (2016)
The zombie apocalypse has been unleashed in South Korea, and a group of total strangers are stuck on a speeding train when the outbreak starts. Sang-ho Yeon’s breathless horror-thriller figures out every possible way to make “zombies on a train” seem new and exciting, and builds a whole cast of characters you won’t want to watch get eaten, even though you know most of them will. Train to Busan is one of the most pulse-pounding zombie movies ever.
Watch Train to Busan on Netflix.
The Ritual (2017)
A group of friends are backpacking through the woods, but after spending the night in an abandoned cabin with a bizarre religious icon inside, they start to experience inexplicable phenomena. There are some familiar elements in David Bruckner’s The Ritual, but the film’s got a great cast and eventually leads to unusual, horrifying conclusions.
Read our The Ritual review and Watch The Ritual on Netflix.
How We Choose the Best Horror Movies on Netflix
[ignvideo url=”https://www.ign.com/videos/2019/10/28/the-10-best-horror-movies”]
Rather than an attempt to include as many diverse and memorable choices as possible from what’s currently available to stream, we lean towards those horror movies that scored well on aggregate sites like Rotten Tomatoes and Metacritic. In some cases, we may pick more critically divisive movies that we still feel are worth checking out. The ultimate goal, however, is to ensure there’s something for horror fans of all tastes.
[widget path=”ign/modules/recirc” parameters=”title=Best%20of%20Netflix%20Right%20Now&type=articles%2Cvideos&tags=recirc-netflix-genre&count=3&columnCount=3&theme=article”]
Source: IGN.com Best Horror Movies on Netflix Right Now (February 2020)