Where to Find Free Movies and TV Shows Online

Category: Television

I’ve written previously about various options for watching TV shows and movies via online streaming services. The good news today is that while Netflix, Amazon Prime, Hulu, Disney and YouTube are constantly raising prices and cracking down on password sharing, a bunch of free options are popping up. Read on to learn how you can get local television channels, movies and popular shows without a subscription or monthly fees...

Check Out These Free Streaming TV and Movie Options

You’ve probably heard about “cord cutting” as a way to save money on your entertainment costs. Cord-cutters are folks who cancel their cable TV service, and use online streaming services to access their favorite shows, movies, news and sports. Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime Video, Sling, YouTube TV, Disney+ and Peacock are some of the most popular streaming services, each with their own lineup of shows, movies, news and sports offerings. But it’s not always easy to find the right combination of providers to match up with your TV wishlist, and still save a few dollars a month.

As I mentioned in the intro, some of the popular streaming services are starting to limit or crack down on customers who share their password with friends or family members. Netflix led the charge, followed by Disney+, Hulu and ESPN Plus. Expect others to follow suit. And taking into account the recent price hikes by the dominant players in the streaming arena, you may wonder if it would be cheaper to stick with your cable TV provider.

Free Streaming TV options

But there is good news... there are some streaming services that won’t cost you a dime. Check out these options, and see if they offer up the mix of viewing content that you and your family require.

In the past, I've written about Locast, a service offering free over-the-air local TV channels via the Internet. Unfortunately, they were sued out of existence by cable TV operators, and forced to shut down that service. But there are other options for free entertainment.

I've previously highlighted Kanopy, a streaming video service that comes to you from local public libraries. Kanopy doesn’t offer millions of movies like Netflix; instead they focus on the classics. Forbes magazine called Kanopy, “One of the most unique and compelling film collections in the world.” See my article Bored With Netflix? Your Library Has Free Movies Too for details on how to access Kanopy via your library card.

If you use a Roku device to stream to your television, there are quite a few free channels that may satisfy your content craving. The Roku Channel offers Hollywood hits, classic TV shows, and live news. Check out these Roku Models for Cord Cutters, starting at $19.99 on Amazon.

Hoopla is another streaming service offered via local public libaries, and it’s more than just movies. They also provide “hundreds of thousands” of TV shows, music, audiobooks, and ebooks. Use your browser, tablet, or phone via instant streaming, or downloaded titles for offline consumption.

Pluto promises free access to 250 channels and thousands of movies, TV shows, breaking news, live sports and more. Their slogan is "Stream now, Pay never." But the cost of free is the time you'll spend watching ads during the show. It’s available on Amazon FireTV, Android or iPhone, Chromecast, Playstation and Roku.

The CW, another popular network, offers a lineup of their shows on CW Network. You can watch the live feed, or pick from a selection of dramas, comedy, action, mystery and thrillters.

Crackle is another ad-supported free entertainment network featuring full-length movies, TV shows, and original programming. It is available on a wide variety of platforms including the Crackle website, smart TVs, mobile devices, set-top boxes, and video game consoles.

Vudu is another free streaming service that offers over 10,000 free movies and TV episodes. They tend not to be the latest and greatest, but they are free. Vudu is owned by Fandango and also offers a premium tier.

Tubi lets you watch movies and TV shows for free, via the Web, iPhone, Android, Roku, or Amazon Fire devices. Tubi promises "fewer ads than cable" and provides content from studios like Paramount, Lionsgate, MGM and about 200 others.

If you subscribe to Amazon Prime, there are lots of movies you can watch for free on Amazon Video. Amazon also produces quite a few original and highly-rated TV series.

FreeVee (previously called IMDb TV) is another Amazon-owned service, offering thousands of movies, TV shows and original content. You can watch FreeVee on your Android or Apple mobile device, or via your favorite streaming device (Roku, Fire stick, Apple TV).

Have you tried any of these free streaming TV services? Do they offer everything you want on the big (or small) screens in your home? Post your comment or question below…

 
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This article was posted by on 15 Aug 2024


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Most recent comments on "Where to Find Free Movies and TV Shows Online"

Posted by:

Robert Lee
15 Aug 2024

My complaint about all the services that seem to be available is that there are too many clicks required to access your content. e.g., Roku>Home Page>app>logon>scroll>look>back>look>back>etc. there was something comfortable about turning on the tv and just using channel up and down until you found what you wanted. I don't want to watch a bunch of movies or tv shows. I just like news, and thus use HAYSTACK as a news aggregator.


Posted by:

hifi5000
15 Aug 2024

When I moved to my current home,I was going through my expenses and decided to get cable TV service last as it can get expensive.Time went by and I never ordered the service.

I still needed ISP service and went with a small local wireless ISP a couple of months after I moved in.The cost for it is very reasonable and I decided to keep things the way they are now.

As a result,I have no interest in movies and TV shows.They don't appeal to me as they once did.


Posted by:

Harold
15 Aug 2024

Can't say enough good things about Kanopy and Hoopla. Kanopy's the place to go for things a little more off the beaten track. Huge selection. Hoopla tends to somewhat more commercial offerings although there are esoteric gems that do pop up. And NO commercials. What's not to like?


Posted by:

Walter
15 Aug 2024

Here in Canada, the main TV networks (CBC Gem, Global, CTV) offer streaming services, with on-demand TV shows and movies, as well as some live TV feeds. There are ads, of course.


Posted by:

Bob K
15 Aug 2024

After you watch most of the current shows offered in prime time, I guess these services that offer shows from the past really shine.

Currently I am in an area where a simple indoor antenna gives me a large umber of channels. A scan for channels gives me a number of about 40. A few of these duplicate each other, and there are a couple home-shopping services that don't interest me, -- but really, you normally don't watch more than one show at a time.



Posted by:

Bob K
15 Aug 2024

One problem with streaming services -- you normally won't get real-time alerts for things like weather alerts, amber alerts, and so on.


Posted by:

The Old Coocker
15 Aug 2024

I have to say that we use Hoopla a lot. It carries most of the British ITV and BBC shows. Great free resource. Kanopy has lots of esoteric shows and many older Oscar winners. However, I am sort of spoiled by some of the HD streams that you get from Prime and Netflix. Kanopy seems to have at times very low quality video in its streams -- almost like someone projected a film on a bedsheet and taped it with VHS. (These are mainly their older classics). But for the price, you can't beat these two.


Posted by:

The Old Coocker
15 Aug 2024

Another comment. Check out and SUPPORT your local libraries. They can be a fantastic resource for any number of videos, whether via streaming or DVD or even sometimes VHS. (ours will even loan a VHS player if you need it.)


Posted by:

Pati
15 Aug 2024

In case anyone wants to watch episodes of msnbc shows a few hours to a day late, topnewsshow.com


Posted by:

Wrinkle
15 Aug 2024

If you know or can easily and quickly find out about your excellent tips if they can be used in the UK.

Eg. can UK library cards be used to access US libraries? Probably not but others of your tips might or might not work in the UK.

I hope this doesn't start requests from the remaining 100s of countries!

Thanks for your good work.


Posted by:

Mark B
15 Aug 2024

Over 10 years ago, my wife and I cut the cord and paid for $150 antenna that got in many channels (including the "sub-channels like 2.2, 2.3, 6.2, 6.4, which are things like MeTV, Dabo, Create, Cozy, etc). A couple of years after that we got Roku for $100, and now has 35 regular channels (plus more if want) with thousands of old TV shows, originals, and lots of movies. Yes we watch the commercials. We know people who spend $250 a month on cable. We spent it over a decade.


Posted by:

Ernest N. Wilcox Jr. (Oldster)
16 Aug 2024

I have a Samsung TV in my bedroom with an indoor antenna. Since I live in a medium-sized metropolitan area, I get TV broadcasts that carry all the major networks (I'm lucky). There are times when solar activity makes receiving OTA broadcasts impractical, but Samsung has a free solution in their included Samsung TV Plus service. It consists of perhaps hundreds or even thousands of free streaming 'live' TV 'channels', starting at channel 1000. I frequently watch channels such as Homefull and Home Refresh channels (for Mike Holmes/home remodeling programming), The Asylum and Midnight Pulp channels for cult classics, the Universe (Mysteries Solved) channel for science documentaries, a variety of the Movie Hub variants, and many more.

My Samsung TV is an older 'smart TV', and I have installed several apps, which include a variety of free services, so when I can't find anything I want to see on the above-mentioned channels, I can switch to an app for something to watch.

Other TV brands should follow Samsung's example, so everyone can enjoy similar ease of TV watching.

Ernie (Oldster)


Posted by:

RandiO
16 Aug 2024

Cord-cutting and streaming was so 2010s!
Now that it has practically decimated the cable industry, their honeymoon is over and reality is smacking both the providers of such service and the consumers hard.
As long as cable companies provide DVRs - to skip the commercials - I see no need for cutting my coax cable.
Being a hunter/seeker for entertainment in the 21st Century has become more costly and time consuming than cable+DVR+remote!


Posted by:

Steve
16 Aug 2024

Bob
The embedded videos in your site cannot be switched off !
Just sayin


Posted by:

DBA Steve
17 Aug 2024

ROKU streaming service has LOTS & LOTS of free movies(old & new) and lots of old TV shows and current news programs. Gotta buy a ROKU device but then thousands of choices are available. Its what I watch almost exclusively.


Posted by:

Eli (Dr. Blues ) Marcus
17 Aug 2024

You can add to the list of free TV/Movies -
https://www.lookmovie2.to/shows
completely free to watch/stream.
If you pay for a subscription, it allows you to download shows and keep a list of favorites or continue watching in a series.


Posted by:

Chuck
19 Aug 2024

This was a brilliant reminder of Kanopy. I knew it existed and use my Library online services regularly for e-books but had forgotten about Kanopy. I went into their site and created an account using my Library credentials. It was fast and easy. There is a huge amount of content. It's free and commercial free. Like I said, Brilliant, thanks Bob.


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