Netflix has stopped working on a range of older smart TVs and streaming devices—and it did not bother sending out a memo. No announcement, no warning email. Users found out the hard way, usually mid-scroll.The clearest indication came via PlayStation 3 owners, who started seeing an error message stating that Netflix “will no longer be available on [the] device after March 2, 2026.” Following the prompt leads to a Netflix support page that now includes a quiet disclaimer: “Netflix may no longer be available on some TVs and TV streaming devices made before 2015.” If your TV is throwing an error when you try to open the app, that note is almost certainly about you.
Why Netflix dropped older TVs from its support list
The explanation is not complicated. Older smart TVs run operating systems that are too outdated to handle what the current Netflix app requires—newer audio formats, higher-resolution video, and tightened security standards. It is the same reason a five-year-old budget Android phone stops receiving app updates. The software has moved on; the hardware has not.Worth noting: this is also separate from another quiet change Netflix made in late 2025, when it pulled mobile casting support from most smart TVs. That feature is now limited to Chromecast (3rd gen or older), Google Nest Hub, and a small selection of Vizio and Compal TVs.
Your TV is fine: Here is how to get Netflix back on it
An HDMI port is all you need. Plug in a Roku or Amazon Fire TV Stick and Netflix is back, no questions asked. If you want something more capable, the Apple TV 4K or Nvidia Shield TV are worth the extra spend. A laptop connected via HDMI works too, as does a phone through a USB-C to HDMI adapter. PS5 and Xbox Series X owners can simply download the Netflix app directly on the console.The fix takes about ten minutes. The frustration of finding out this way is understandable, though.
