Hulu vs Netflix in 2026: Which Streaming Service Wins for Your Watching Habits?

Hulu vs Netflix in 2026

Hulu and Netflix are often discussed as competitors, but they’re actually quite different products. Netflix is the larger, more international, originals-heavy service. Hulu is smaller, US-focused, with strong current-season network TV and FX original content. After a year of using both daily, here’s the honest comparison.

TL;DR

  • Pick Netflix if: You value international content, broad library, originals, family-friendly mix
  • Pick Hulu if: You watch current-season network TV, FX/HBO-adjacent dramas, want US-focused service
  • Get both if: You have $34/mo budget for streaming and watch a lot
  • Hulu + Disney+ + ESPN+ bundle at $22/mo is exceptional value if you want this combination

For most US households: Netflix as primary + Hulu rotated in for specific shows is the optimized setup.

What each service is

Netflix

Launched: 1997 (DVD rental); 2007 (streaming)
Owner: Public company (NFLX)
Subscriber count: ~280M global
Library size: 6,000+ titles in US; smaller in other regions
Content focus: Mix of licensed content + heavy investment in originals (movies, series, documentaries, animated content)
Available in: Most countries globally
Cost: $7/mo (ad-supported) | $16/mo (standard) | $25/mo (premium 4K)

Hulu

Launched: 2007
Owner: Disney (majority owner since 2019)
Subscriber count: ~50M (US only)
Library size: ~2,500-3,000 titles
Content focus: Current-season network TV (ABC, NBC, FOX), original series, FX content
Available in: US only (and Japan)
Cost: $8/mo (ad-supported) | $18/mo (no ads) | $77/mo (with Live TV) | $22/mo (Disney+/Hulu/ESPN+ bundle)

Library size and content mix

Netflix has roughly 2-3x more total titles than Hulu. But raw count isn’t the whole story.

Netflix strengths

  • Strong international content — Spanish, Korean, Indian, French productions
  • Family-friendly content (kid shows, family movies)
  • Genre breadth — documentaries, stand-up comedy, animated specials, romance, thrillers
  • Heavy originals investment — Stranger Things, The Crown, Bridgerton, etc.
  • Movies catalog large (though somewhat rotating)

Hulu strengths

  • Current-season network TV — most ABC, NBC, FOX shows available day-after-air
  • FX original content — The Bear, Shogun, Reservation Dogs, The Veil (FX shows hit Hulu)
  • Adult animated comedy strong (Family Guy, American Dad backstock)
  • Reality TV strong (Real Housewives, Survivor, etc.)
  • Some HBO-adjacent shows (Welcome to Wrexham, others)

Where they overlap

  • Most major movie studios license to both
  • Both have strong original investment (Hulu: Only Murders in the Building, etc.)
  • Both have decent kids content (though Disney+ is the real kids destination)
  • Both have decent documentaries

Where they don’t overlap

  • Netflix originals are exclusive to Netflix (largely)
  • Current-season network TV is largely on Hulu, not Netflix
  • FX shows are on Hulu, not Netflix
  • International content is far more Netflix-heavy

Pricing comparison

For “no ads” tier (the only tier most viewers want):

  • Netflix Standard: $16/mo
  • Hulu No Ads: $18/mo
  • Both: $34/mo

For ad-supported:
Netflix: $7/mo
Hulu: $8/mo
Both: $15/mo

For “I’ll take the Disney+ bundle”:
Disney+/Hulu/ESPN+ bundle (ad-supported): $11/mo
Disney+/Hulu/ESPN+ bundle (no ads): $22/mo

The Disney+ bundle is the highest-value play. ~$22/mo gets you Disney+ + Hulu + ESPN+. Standalone Hulu no-ads is $18; standalone Disney+ is $14; standalone ESPN+ is $11. Sum: $43. Bundle saves you $21/mo.

Real-world quality test

We tracked our team’s watching over 8 weeks:

Netflix average watch time: 12 hours/week (kids’ content, evening prestige TV, weekend movies)

Hulu average watch time: 6 hours/week (current TV shows, FX dramas, reality TV cycles)

Time spent doesn’t directly equal value, but it’s a signal.

Show satisfaction: Both produced “must watch” shows in this period (Netflix: continuing Stranger Things, new Korean drama; Hulu: latest FX drama, Only Murders new season).

Family viewing: Netflix wins. Their family/kids library is dramatically larger.

Adult prestige TV: Tied. FX content on Hulu is excellent; Netflix originals (Diplomat, House of Cards reruns) are excellent too.

Background TV (something to have on): Hulu wins. Reality TV catalog is hard to beat for “fill the room with content.”

When you should pick which

Pick only Netflix if:

  • You have kids who watch a lot of family content
  • You’re not in the US (Netflix dominates internationally; Hulu mostly doesn’t exist)
  • You watch international content (K-dramas, Spanish dramas, etc.)
  • You’re a documentary fan
  • You only want one service

Pick only Hulu if:

  • You’re a US viewer who watches network TV next-day
  • You’re an FX fan
  • You watch reality TV regularly
  • You like the Disney+ bundle for additional value

Pick both if:

  • You watch 10+ hours/week
  • $34-43/mo of streaming is acceptable to you
  • You want to “cover the bases” for prestige TV + current TV + kids + reality

Pick neither if:

  • You’re a cord-cutter optimizing aggressively (use Tubi + library Kanopy for free)
  • You watch <5 hours/week
  • You’re primarily a film buff (Criterion + Max are better)

The “rotation strategy”

For people who can’t justify $34/mo for both:

Strategy: Alternate. Netflix for 3 months, Hulu for 3 months, swap.

When you have Netflix only:
– Catch up on Netflix originals you’ve been waiting for
– Watch family content
– Watch international shows

When you have Hulu only:
– Catch up on FX shows you’ve been waiting for
– Catch up on current network TV
– Watch reality TV / cycling shows

Trade-off: You miss the shows that launched on the “off” service while you weren’t subscribed. But you save 50% on monthly cost.

Add-ons each one offers

Netflix add-ons:
– Premium tier adds 4K HDR and Spatial Audio ($25/mo)
– Mobile-only plan in some regions ($4/mo limited)
– Annual subscription not currently available

Hulu add-ons:
– Hulu + Live TV ($77/mo standalone)
– HBO Max add-on (~$15/mo on top of Hulu)
– Showtime add-on
– Many smaller channel add-ons

For Hulu users who want HBO content: the HBO add-on is convenient.

International viewer considerations

Netflix abroad: Library varies by country. Use a VPN to access US/UK/JP libraries from elsewhere. Our streaming VPN article covers this.

Hulu abroad: Hulu is US-only and Japan-only. To access from elsewhere: VPN + US payment method (US gift card most reliable).

For international viewers wanting US Hulu: see our Hulu VPN guide.

Mobile and TV experiences

Netflix: Best-in-class on every platform. Smart TV apps mature, mobile apps polished, smart playback prediction.

Hulu: Strong but slightly less polished than Netflix. Smart TV apps good, mobile apps adequate.

Both work on Apple TV, Fire TV, Roku, Chromecast.

Netflix:
– Spending ~$17B/year on content (2026 estimate)
– Heavy on originals
– Decreased licensing of others’ content (they want their own catalog)
– Aggressively pursuing global market

Hulu:
– Disney-funded; conservative spending
– Strategic focus on FX and ABC content (parent company content)
– More dependent on network TV deals

Long-term, Netflix’s strategy is “more original, more global.” Hulu’s strategy is “Disney’s window for adult content (vs Disney+ for family content).”

What we use

The Stream Unchained team:
– 3 of us subscribe to both Netflix and Hulu (or the Disney bundle)
– 1 subscribes to Netflix only (international viewer)
– 1 rotates monthly

For US households: both is common. For international: Netflix only is standard.

Disclosure

We use affiliate links for Disney+ bundle (includes Hulu) and Netflix where available. Commission doesn’t change rankings. See our affiliate disclosure.


Last updated 2026 Q2.

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