Netflix Pricing Around the World

What You Actually Get for Your Money in 83 Countries

Data collected June 2025 | Prices converted as of 15/06/2025

Here's What We Found

Look, everyone knows Netflix prices are different around the world. But just how different? We pulled together pricing data from 83 countries to see who's getting the best deal and who's getting a raw deal. Turns out the gap between what people pay and what they get is way bigger than you'd think.

We're talking about comparing monthly costs, all converted to USD so we can actually compare apples to apples, library sizes, and what you're really paying per title. Some folks are getting thousands of extra shows and movies for half the price. Others are paying premium rates for less content.

The Big Takeaways

Switzerland Pays the Most

If you're streaming in Switzerland, you're dropping $21.48 every month. That's the highest price globally. The library? About 8,982 titles. Not terrible, but definitely not matching that premium price tag.

Slovakia Has the Biggest Library

Slovakia subscribers get access to 9,554 titles, the most content anywhere on Netflix. And they're only paying $8.61 monthly, which works out to about $0.00090 per title. That's genuinely impressive value.

India Gets the Best Deal

At $0.00032 per title, India wins the value game hands down. Sure, the library isn't the biggest at 7,550 titles, but when you're paying just $2.41 a month, nobody's complaining.

Prices Vary Like Crazy

The difference between cheapest and most expensive? Over 890%. Netflix isn't doing one size fits all pricing. They're charging whatever each market can handle.

Library Sizes All Over the Place

Some countries get 5,000+ more titles than others. Licensing deals, local content, and regional restrictions create huge gaps in what's actually available to watch.

Clear Regional Patterns

Europe generally has bigger libraries, between 8,000 and 9,500+ titles, but charges more. Asia and Latin America have smaller catalogs but way lower prices, clearly optimized for those specific markets.

Let's Break This Down

Who's Paying What?

Western Europe dominates the expensive end. Switzerland ($21.48), Israel ($14.00), and Germany ($14.00) are paying premium prices, probably because Netflix knows these markets can afford it and there's strong demand for streaming content.

Mid-range pricing ($8-12/month) covers big markets like the US ($15.49), UK ($8.61), and Australia ($12.92). These seem calibrated to stay competitive while still making decent money in markets where streaming wars are heating up.

Pattern Worth Noting: Smaller wealthier countries pay significantly more. Switzerland, Norway, and Denmark all top $12 monthly, while huge population centers like India, Turkey, and Argentina stay under $5.

Content Libraries: What's Available Where

Slovakia's massive 9,554 title library is kind of unusual. They're benefiting from European licensing agreements plus regional content. Slovenia with 9,557 and Bulgaria with 9,586 are right behind, suggesting Central Europe has some favorable multi region licensing going on.

On the flip side, Ukraine with 5,701 titles and Israel with 6,549 titles have much smaller catalogs despite being in competitive markets. This screams licensing headaches, probably related to content restrictions, censorship, or complicated regional rights.

The Real Value Calculation

Here's where it gets interesting. India's $0.00032 per title wins because they've got low pricing at $2.41 and a solid 7,550 title library. Egypt at $0.00027 and Nigeria at $0.00028 follow the same playbook. Aggressive pricing in emerging markets creates insane value.

Compare that to Switzerland at $0.00239 per title, literally over 7 times more expensive than India on a per title basis. Swiss subscribers aren't getting 7x the content. They're just living in an expensive market where Netflix can charge more.

Reality Check: Western European subscribers typically pay 5 to 10 times more per title than Asian subscribers. The content difference doesn't come close to justifying that gap. It's just economic reality based on what people will pay.

What This Actually Means

If you're in a high price market, your monthly fee is basically funding Netflix's global content machine and their expansion into price sensitive regions. Those $15 to $20+ payments from Europe and North America subsidize the aggressive pricing in India, Brazil, and Southeast Asia.

For anyone trying to be budget conscious, location is everything. A hypothetical VPN user accessing Netflix from India versus Switzerland gets similar core content for a fraction of the cost, though Netflix's terms say you shouldn't do this.

Price vs. Content: Not Connected

There's surprisingly little link between how much you pay and how much content you get. Some of the priciest markets like Switzerland, Israel, and Germany have mid tier libraries around 8,000 to 9,000 titles. Meanwhile, affordable markets like Turkey at $3.34 and Argentina at $3.57 are serving up 7,000+ titles.

This shows Netflix's real strategy: charge based on market economics, not content volume. It makes business sense but creates wild value differences globally.

Best Value Rankings by Country

Rank Country Monthly Price (USD) Library Size Cost per Title
1 Egypt $1.98 7,287 $0.00027
2 Nigeria $2.00 7,267 $0.00028
3 India $2.41 7,550 $0.00032
4 Kenya $2.27 7,277 $0.00031
5 Turkey $3.34 7,225 $0.00046
6 Argentina $3.57 7,723 $0.00046
7 Colombia $3.62 7,669 $0.00047
8 Pakistan $2.82 7,428 $0.00038
9 Chile $3.62 7,683 $0.00047
10 Peru $3.62 7,651 $0.00047
11 Tunisia $3.99 7,332 $0.00054
12 Indonesia $5.02 8,002 $0.00063
13 Thailand $5.02 8,348 $0.00060
14 Philippines $5.02 8,411 $0.00060
15 Singapore $5.02 8,314 $0.00060
16 South Africa $5.47 7,339 $0.00075
17 Saudi Arabia $5.47 7,252 $0.00075
18 United Arab Emirates $5.47 7,062 $0.00077
19 Malaysia $5.02 7,241 $0.00069
20 Ukraine $5.41 5,701 $0.00095

Most Expensive Markets

Rank Country Monthly Price (USD) Library Size Cost per Title
1 Switzerland $21.48 8,982 $0.00239
2 United States $15.49 7,511 $0.00206
3 Israel $14.00 6,549 $0.00214
4 Canada $14.00 7,745 $0.00181
5 Germany $14.00 8,628 $0.00162
6 Portugal $14.00 9,240 $0.00152
7 Ireland $14.00 8,868 $0.00158
8 Austria $14.00 8,667 $0.00161
9 Netherlands $14.00 9,107 $0.00154
10 Australia $12.92 7,809 $0.00165
11 France $12.92 8,471 $0.00153
12 Sweden $12.92 8,471 $0.00153
13 Norway $12.92 8,437 $0.00153
14 Denmark $12.92 8,354 $0.00155
15 Finland $12.92 8,471 $0.00153
16 Iceland $12.92 9,504 $0.00136
17 Lithuania $12.92 9,438 $0.00137
18 Latvia $12.92 9,454 $0.00137
19 Estonia $12.92 9,412 $0.00137
20 Slovenia $12.92 9,557 $0.00135

Countries with Biggest Libraries

Rank Country Library Size Monthly Price (USD) Cost per Title
1 Bulgaria 9,586 $8.61 $0.00090
2 Slovenia 9,557 $12.92 $0.00135
3 Slovakia 9,554 $8.61 $0.00090
4 Iceland 9,504 $12.92 $0.00136
5 Latvia 9,454 $12.92 $0.00137
6 Lithuania 9,438 $12.92 $0.00137
7 Estonia 9,412 $12.92 $0.00137
8 Portugal 9,240 $14.00 $0.00152
9 Czech Republic 8,828 $8.61 $0.00098
10 United Kingdom 8,809 $8.61 $0.00098
11 Romania 9,079 $8.61 $0.00095
12 Greece 8,903 $8.61 $0.00097
13 Hungary 8,682 $8.61 $0.00099
14 Ireland 8,868 $14.00 $0.00158
15 Netherlands 9,107 $14.00 $0.00154
16 Switzerland 8,982 $21.48 $0.00239
17 Germany 8,628 $14.00 $0.00162
18 Austria 8,667 $14.00 $0.00161
19 Italy 9,007 $14.00 $0.00155
20 Spain 9,303 $12.92 $0.00139

So What's the Verdict?

Netflix's global pricing strategy is pretty simple when you look at it: charge what each market can afford, not based on how much content they're getting. The connection between price and library size is weak. Some of the cheapest markets have huge catalogs while expensive ones sometimes get less.

If you're paying $15 to $21 monthly in Switzerland, United States, or Israel, you're basically bankrolling Netflix's worldwide content budget and their push into emerging markets. Your subscription helps fund those crazy low $2-3 prices in India, Egypt, and Nigeria where Netflix is chasing subscribers over immediate profits.

The sweet spot? Central and Eastern Europe. Places like Bulgaria, Slovakia, and Czech Republic get massive libraries with 9,000+ titles for reasonable prices between $8 and $9 monthly. That's genuinely good value.

What's obvious is that Netflix has absolutely nailed price discrimination on a global level. They've figured out exactly what each market will pay and priced accordingly. Fair? Debatable. Effective? Absolutely. They're still the dominant streaming platform worldwide despite these huge price gaps.

Bottom line for subscribers: geography is destiny when it comes to Netflix value. Getting 7,000+ titles for under $5? You're winning. Paying $15+ for fewer than 8,000 titles? You're in the premium bracket, subsidizing everyone else's streaming.Ps: we used Netflix standard subscription add free all over the tests.

Data collected June 2025 | Prices converted as of 15/06/2025

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