
15 Scariest Things To Watch On Netflix

15. Creep
A guy answers a Craigslist ad to film a stranger for the day, and what follows is awkward, offbeat, and increasingly unsettling. It’s a slow burn with a DIY feel, but once it hits its stride, the tension gets real and the payoff is genuinely disturbing. | © Netflix

14. The Platform
A prison with food delivered floor by floor, too much at the top, nothing at the bottom. The Platform is brutal, bloody, and a sharp, unforgettable dive into human nature, greed, and how far people will go to survive. | © Netflix

13. Bird Box
Don’t look—seriously, looking means death. Sandra Bullock plays a mother doing whatever it takes to protect two kids in a world where survival means staying blindfolded, and the tension never lets up. | © Netflix

12. The Unholy
A young deaf girl starts performing miracles after claiming she was visited by the Virgin Mary, but something much darker is at work. It’s a classic case of faith turned frightening, and while the scares are mild, Jeffrey Dean Morgan keeps it watchable. | © Netflix

11. Death Note
A high schooler finds a notebook that lets him kill anyone just by writing their name, and things spiral really fast. With its eerie god of death, moral mind games, and slow-burn tension, this anime makes justice feel terrifying. | © Netflix

10. Stranger Things
Stranger Things is not straight-up horror, but when the lights flicker and the Demogorgon shows up, you’ll feel it. Packed with suspense, ‘80s vibes, and just enough creepy to keep your heart racing, this is the show that converts non-horror fans into full-blown addicts. | © Netflix

9. The Fall Of The House Of Usher
The ultra-rich Usher family built an empire, and now they’re dying off one by one in the most brutal, bizarre ways. It’s gothic horror meets corporate greed, with pitch-black humor, sharp writing, and some of Flanagan’s most chilling work to date. | © Netflix

8. Don't Kill Me
After dying from a drug overdose, a teenage girl comes back hungry and far from human. Don't Kill Me is messy, violent, and more morally twisted than you’d expect from a teen horror romance. | © Netflix

7. Gerald's Game
Gerald's Game starts as a couple's getaway and turns into a terrifying fight for survival, handcuffed, alone, and haunted by more than just memories. It’s claustrophobic, deeply unsettling, and proof that sometimes the scariest stuff comes from your mind. | © Netflix

6. Texas Chainsaw Massacre
Texas Chainsaw Massacre isn't about gore; this movie is about pure, relentless dread. With its grainy look, eerie silence, and that first hammer scene burned into horror history, this low-budget classic still feels like a nightmare you weren’t supposed to see. | © Netflix

5. The Haunting Of Hill House
Yes, it’s a ghost story, but it's also a sharp movie about family, grief, and the things we carry. Between the slow-building dread, brilliant time jumps, and hidden scares in the corners of nearly every frame, this one sticks with you. | © Netflix

4. Under Paris
A giant shark lurking in the Seine sounds wild enough, but wait until it leads to a nest hidden in the catacombs. It starts like it wants to be Jaws, then suddenly dives into total shark-movie madness and honestly, that’s when it gets fun. | © Netflix

3. Apostle
Apostle follows a man who travels to a remote island to rescue his sister from a mysterious cult, but what he finds is way darker than just rituals and robes. It’s like if The Wicker Man took a hard turn into Lovecraft territory, full of eerie rituals, gory surprises, and slow-building dread that gets under your skin. | © Netflix

2. The Ritual
The Ritual follows four friends who take a hiking trip through the Scandinavian wilderness and end up lost in a forest that feels deeply wrong. What starts as grief and guilt slowly turns into something primal and terrifying watching them. | © Netflix

1. His House
His House is brilliant filmmaking about a refugee couple that tries to start over in England, only to find something evil lurking in their new home. But the real horror isn’t just the ghosts, it's what they brought with them, and what they’re trying to forget. | © Netflix
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