The Best Horror Movies on Netflix to Stream Right Now (July 2024)

If you need even more evidence of horror’s continued dominance, no matter the time of year, look to streaming services at the start of every month. Each month brings a plethora of new additions to streaming libraries across all platforms, from Netflix to Tubi. That means an insane selection of all styles and types of horror available at our fingertips. The downside is that it can make choosing the perfect horror movie to watch an overwhelming process. Sometimes you want to cut right to the chase to find the best Netflix horror movies.

If you get stuck scrolling for hours searching for a good watch on Netflix, we’re here to help. Here are the best Netflix horror movies you can stream right now, from folk horror to existential nightmares to inventive creature features and beyond.


American Psycho

American Psycho

Mary Harron’s adaptation of the novel brings the dark humor and bloodletting in equal measure. Wealthy New York investment banker Patrick Bateman (Christian Bale) is obsessed with materialism and wealth. His favorite pastime is showing off to coworkers while hiding his psychopathic side. Oh yeah, Patrick also loves murder. The eponymous American Psycho uses his highly competitive, yuppie workplace as just one of his favored hunting grounds. A chilling indictment on shallow consumerism and detachment from reality, Bale’s iconic performance is an all-timer.


Apostle

Apostle Netflix

Writer/Director Gareth Evans brings the bone-crunching brutality of The Raid and The Raid 2 to his period folk horror film. The Guest’s Dan Stevens stars as Thomas, a man who travels to a remote island in 1905 to infiltrate the cult that’s kidnapped his sister for ransom. The cult leaders claim that the barren island was made fertile through blood sacrifice, and in his quest, Thomas learns the grim truth behind those sacrifices. The twists and visceral violence make for a gripping, gory final act with torrential bloodletting. Apostle is a slow burn that embraces its mysteries, but the journey is worth taking.


The Autopsy of Jane Doe

The Autopsy of Jane Doe

André Øvredal goes full throttle for the scares in this quiet little chiller that sees a father and son coroner team stumped over the bizarre mysteries contained within the body of an unidentified young woman. Well executed scares, clever twists, and earnest performances by Brian Cox and Emile Hirsch give this supernatural haunter serious heft. While the narrative bides its time unveiling the truth behind Jane Doe’s battered body, it’s heavily steeped in witchcraft. In other words, The Autopsy of Jane Doe presents a new take on the subgenre. More importantly, it’s seriously spooky.


The Babysitter

THE BABYSITTER

 

In The Babysitter, bullied twelve-year-old Cole Johnson (Suitable Flesh‘s Judah Lewis) bonds with his cool babysitter Bee (Samara Weaving), but their fun goes awry when he sneaks out of his room and witnesses a Satanic sacrifice. It turns out that Bee and her bubbly popular-type pals are into Satanism and murder, and they’re willing to kill to keep their secret from getting out. McG’s horror-comedy brings the laughs and charm thanks to a scene-stealing performance from Weaving.


Backcountry

Backcountry

 

Alex and Jenn quickly find they’re in way over their heads when they decide to leave the city behind and try their hand at camping. But the more Alex insists on bringing Jenn to his favorite spot nestled deep within the wilderness, the more evident it becomes that he’s gotten them lost. Much of Pyewacket director Adam MacDonald’s feature debut plays like an intense survival thriller, with tensions between the pair rising as their supplies dwindle. There may or may not be a predatory man lurking nearby, but it doesn’t hold a candle to the territorial black bear. There are bear attack movies, and then there’s this one, which delivers the most vicious attack sequence of all time. It’s more than worth the wait getting there.


Blood Red Sky

Blood Red Sky


Bodies Bodies Bodies
Maria Bakalova
A long history of social deduction games predate the popular paranoia-inducing online game Among Us, from Mafia to WerewolfBodies Bodies Bodies presents a variation of the game among a group of privileged friends, one that spirals violently out of control once backstabbing, bad social behavior, and hysteria take root. The A24-produced murder whodunnit offers up scathing critiques of class, privilege, and modern toxic social media behaviors in a pitch-black social satire horror-comedy.

Cam

Cam

 

Alice (Madeline Brewer) works as an online cam girl, and she’s obsessed with her ranking on the cam site. The higher her ranking goes, the more it draws unwanted attention, and Alice soon finds herself replaced on her own show with a doppelganger. Cam uses the horror thriller premise to examine the life of a sex worker; Alice’s career ambition is directly at odds with the shame it brings to her family and how she tries to spare them from it by keeping them in the dark. It only compounds her danger when the doppelganger enters the equation in director Daniel Goldhaber’s engaging thriller.


The Conjuring 2

THE CONJURING 2 | image via New Line Cinema and Matt Kennedy

 


Disappear Completely

Disappear Completely

Tabloid photographer Santiago (Harold Torres) will go to great lengths to get the perfect shot, tact and morals be damned. His insensitivity even extends to his home life, where he learns his girlfriend Marcela (Teté Espinoza) is pregnant. But his professional ambitions and pessimistic outlook get tested when he snaps photos at a particularly grisly new crime scene; Santiago finds himself afflicted with a curse that’s causing him to lose his senses one by one. Director Luis Javier Henaine captures Santiago’s unraveling with a grim atmosphere and inventive camera work that immerses viewers in Santiago’s race against time before he loses everything. It’s a moody, Satanic cautionary tale centered around an unlikable protagonist.


The Fear Street Trilogy

Fear Street trilogy

FEAR STREET PART 1: 1994 – (Pictured) MAYA HAWKE as HEATHER. Cr: Netflix © 2021

Director Leigh Janiak helms a trio of slashers based on R.L. Stine’s popular YA book series, with each entry largely set in different eras. That ultimately means that each installment will vary based on preferences, whether you’re into ’90s nostalgia, bloodier ’70s slasher fare, or a witchy rewind all the way to 1666. With style and a likable cast, it’s no wonder that the Fear Street trilogy was the summer event of 2021.


Gerald’s Game

Gerald's Game


His House

His House

Husband-and-wife Sudanese refugees Bol (Sope Dirisu) and Rial (Wunmi Mosaku) have been through more than most endure in a lifetime. They’ve fled their war-torn village, crossed the ocean, survived a degrading stint in a U.K. detention facility, and finally been granted an opportunity for housing in their new country. The home may be roomy, but they face hostility in and outside its moldy walls. Remi Weekes’s feature debut transforms the refugee experience into a petrifying horror film with expertly crafted scares. For all the existential terror Bol and Rial face in their new lives, the director also keeps a firm grip on the supernatural.

The House

The House Netflix animated


It Follows

It Follows


May The Devil Take You

May the Devil Take You


Missing

Missing

 

This twisty screenlife thriller tracks June’s (Storm Reid) search for answers when her mother (Nia Long) goes missing on vacation. June creatively uses all the latest technology at her fingertips to try and find Mom from thousands of miles away, but the more she digs, the more unsettling questions she uncovers. Written and directed by Will Merrick and Nick Johnson, Missing moves at a breakneck pace and keeps you guessing.


No One Gets Out Alive

No One Gets Out Alive

No One Gets Out Alive. Cr. Teddy Cavendish/Netflix © 2021


The Perfection

Fantastic Fest The Perfection

 

This Netflix gem feels like a few different subgenres rolled into one twisty horror thriller, and that unpredictability makes for a wild ride. The setup is simple; former music prodigy Charlotte (Get Out’s Allison Williams) returns to her past school and befriends new star pupil Elizabeth (Logan Browning), sending both down a path of shocking destruction. A little bit MartyrsOldboy, and more, this pick is for those that like their horror on the more deliciously outlandish side.


The Platform

The Platform


The Ritual
Ritual Jotunn
Director David Bruckner established his ability to instill unsettling dread and unspool imaginative mythology with Netflix’s The Ritual. Based on Adam Nevill’s novel, The Ritual follows a group of old friends embarking on a trek to honor a lost loved one. A series of bad luck and strange circumstances lead them further into the forest, where they soon find themselves stalked by a menacing presence. It’s gorgeous, eerie, and captivating.

Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark

Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark Netflix

 

On Halloween 1968, Stella (Zoe Margaret Colletti) and her two friends meet drifter Ramon (Michael Garza) while fleeing bullies. They invite Ramon to explore a local haunted house, where Stella discovers a mysterious book containing horror stories that seem to write themselves in real-time. Director André Øvredal brings the nightmarish illustrations by Stephen Gammell and stories by Alvin Schwartz to life. Harold the scarecrow, the Pale Lady, the Big Toe corpse (Javier Botet), and the Jangly Man (Troy James) terrorize Mill Valley’s teens in this recent Halloween treat.


Thanksgiving

After 16 years, Eli Roth finally expands his faux Grindhouse trailer into feature form. Instead of building his quintessential slasher around the grainy Grindhouse anesthetic, however, he brings the classic-style slasher into the modern world. Roth, along with co-writer Jeff Rendell, seeks to make a meal of the revenge slasher format with a holiday twist through humor and memorable kills. Each death brings pain and bloodletting in delightfully mean-spirited, suspenseful ways. It results in a holiday horror effort that captures the lean, mean, and gory spirit of early aughts horror but set in the present. It’s a solid, entertaining reminder that sometimes simplicity is best.

The Trip

The Trip netflix horror


Under the Shadow


Veronica

Veronica netflix horror

 

Inspired by true eventsVeronica tells of a teen girl in Madrid that’s besieged by an evil presence after playing with an Ouija board with friends during school. REC‘s Paco Plaza once again proves his knack for atmosphere and scares, and the cast is wholly endearing (Ivan Chavero wins horror’s cutest kid award as the adorable Antonito). While it’s initial debut on Netflix came loaded with a reputation for terrifying viewers, Veronica isn’t actually the scariest film ever made. But it is a solid entry in 2018’s roster of horror with a few potent chills. Make it a double feature with prequel movie Sister Death, also available to stream now.


The Wailing

The Wailing

 

 

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