If you’re tired of scrolling through Netflix’s mediocre horror section only to realize the good stuff costs extra on Prime Video, it’s time to talk about Tubi. While other streaming services hide their best scary movies behind a paywall, Tubi offers a treasure trove of horror for free.
And I’m not talking about bottom-of-the-barrel B-movies. We’re talking stone-cold classics like The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, modern found-footage gems like Hell House LLC, and a ton of weird, cult-favorite horror you won’t find anywhere else.
It’s ad-supported, which means you just open the app and press play. No subscriptions, no credit cards, just a few short ad breaks that are perfectly timed for a popcorn refill. Stop paying for disappointment and start exploring the horror library you actually want. Check out some of our favorite picks, including Jennifer’s Body and Hellraiser, below.
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Host traps six friends on a lockdown-era Zoom séance that goes very wrong. A hired medium drops, a prank backfires, and something answers anyway. We may no longer all be sitting on remote calls in the middle of the COVID era, but those feelings have not been lost here in this heavy look at what can happen online and on video. It is lean, nasty, and uncomfortably believable.
This eerie flick follows Christine Brown (Alison Lohman), a bank loan officer who denies an extension and ends up cursed by a vengeful Lamia disgusied as an elderly woman. Brown then finds herself tormented over the span of three days, after which she’ll be quite literally dragged to hell, as the movie title implies. It’s a rough and gory ride from start to finish with a killer ending.
When high school cheerleader Jennifer Check (Megan Fox) is possessed by a demonic force after a botched sacrifice, she develops an insatiable hunger for human flesh. Specifically, the flesh of the boys in her small town. As her best friend Needy (Amanda Seyfried) starts noticing Jennifer’s transformation, she realizes that stopping her may be the only way to save everyone.
Produced in 1974 for a mere $140,000, Tobe Hooper’s indie film about a family of cannibals who just want to be left alone (and eat everyone who bothers them) introduced several slasher horror tropes that have since become cliches, as well as the terrifying human monster Leatherface.
Clive Barker might hate the name “Pinhead,” but fans loved it, as well as the character called “Lead Cenobite” in Hellraiser’s credits. The supernatural gore-fest is filled with disturbing practical effects and buckets and buckets of blood.
George Romero broke the mold with this germinal horror flick that introduced a generation of horror fans to the walking dead. Shambling “ghouls” terrorize a group of young adults in a farmhouse, yet the danger comes as much from other humans as from the undead
Widower Shigeharu Aoyama holds a fake movie audition to find a new wife and finds himself enamored with the quiet and reserved Asami. As they enter a relationship, he ignores the warning signs about her dark past. When the truth is finally revealed, he finds himself trapped in a nightmarish descent into pain, obsession, and torture, much of which involves sewing needles.
This unique throwback flick set in the 1980s is painstakingly made to appear it was filmed then too. College student Samantha takes a babysitting job in a house in a remote area but soon learns she was hired to take care of a completely different charge who may be linked to some sinister happenings.
This faux-documentary follows Deborah Logan, an elderly woman with Alzheimer’s who’s been exhibiting disturbing behavior. The film crew finds a connection to a local physician involved in ritualistic murders. A terrifying supernatural secret unfolds as we learn the real cause of Deborah’s ailments.
Written and directed by Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead (who also play the lead roles), this low-budget indie sci-fi/horror film features two brothers who return to the UFO cult where they were raised, only to find that many in the community haven’t aged at all. Perceptions and reality unloosen as the brothers learn the true secrets behind the strange phenomena at Camp Arcadia.
For those who prefer their dread to creep up on them, this psychological horror film provides a sinister slow burn. An ex-boyfriend accepts a dinner invitation from an old romantic partner with a traumatic past and her new man. His paranoia and suspicions keep everyone on edge through the early night, until the party breaks into unexpected chaos and a shocking conclusion.
When a mysterious illness spreads through a quiet Korean village, the locals turn violent and begin dying under strange circumstances. Soon, a bumbling police officer named Jong-goo (Kwak Do-won) is drawn into the investigation. But what starts as a series of bizarre deaths quickly spirals into something far more sinister. With his own daughter at risk, Jong-goo must uncover the truth behind the evil infecting his town before it takes over.
This French zombie film takes a minimal approach to the undead apocalypse. Lead character Sam wakes up in his ex-girlfriend’s apartment after a party to find the building and city have been taken over by zombies. Slow and mostly silent, the film explores Sam’s loneliness and dwindling sanity as he tries to stay alive all by himself.
Twin brothers Elias and Lukas become (understandably) suspicious of their mom when she returns home from having facial surgery. Her head is wrapped in bandages and she starts showing some uncharacteristically cold and unsettling behavior. The boys become convinced she’s an imposter, so they take drastic measures to find out the truth.
Lucio Fulci’s Zombie (billed as Zombi 2 in Italy though not a sequel) is a late 1970s horror classic featuring an island-based undead outbreak that threatens to expand into New York City and beyond — a classic zombies-eating-a-lot-of-humans flick that’s perfect for a 3 a.m. watch. Don’t miss the underwater battle between tiger shark and zombie.
This English-language remake of the Japanese horror classic follows a reporter investigating a cursed videotape that leads to the viewer’s death seven days later. But culturally, it’s much more than that, having been influential in popularizing J-horror around the globe, including the American version The Ring, which had its own unique phenomenon.
When ex-con Arkin (Josh Stewart) breaks into a wealthy family’s home to steal a valuable gem, he thinks he’s pulled off the perfect heist. But someone else got there first: a masked killer with a house full of deadly traps. As Arkin realizes he’s trapped inside with the family and the sadistic intruder, his robbery turns into a terrifying fight for survival.
When a stash of videotapes are discovered in an abandoned house in Poughkeepsie, New York, the footage reveals the decades-long reign of terror by a sadistic serial killer. Through interviews, police evidence, and the killer’s own recordings, investigators piece together the horrifying extent of his crimes. But with the suspect still at large, the tapes raise more questions than answers.
Sergeant Neil Howie visits the island of Summerisle to investigate the disappearance of a young girl. But when he gets there, he discovers the islanders have a sinister secret behind their paganistic rituals. As he delves deeper, he finds himself tangled up in their wicked ways, leading to a shocking climax that’s been copied and parodied many times since.
In this classic horror parody, the Hyatt family inherits a house with a cursed book and soon meets a string of monsters and other various creatures. A vampire named Waldemar and the sinister Van Helsing are a few of the colorful characters the family encounters as they banter with the ghosts and demons of their new home.
An antique book dealer (Johnny Depp) and creepy collector (Frank Lagella) square off in this tense horror/thriller about a tome that supposedly summons the devil. Using a classic film noir style, the film slowly draws Depp into a broader mystery, while the understated action gradually builds to a fiery climax at the gates of hell.
Maddie, a deaf and mute writer living alone, finds herself trapped in a deadly game of cat and mouse when a masked killer decides to make her his prey. Unable to hear his movements or call for help, she must figure out a way to outmaneuver him and potentially turn the tables on him during this terrifying ordeal.
Damien Leone’s indie slasher flick is an absolutely brutal gore fest featuring a truly grotesque and evil villain — Art the Clown — who terrorizes two young women on Halloween night. The franchise has already spawned a trilogy, but it’s definitely not for squeamish viewers.
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