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- Why Tubi matters for horror fans (and how to navigate it)
- Top 50 horror films on Tubi you should watch first
- The Changeling (1980)
- The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974)
- Day of the Dead (1985)
- The Wailing (2016)
- The Babadook (2014)
- The Invitation (2016)
- Let Me In (2010)
- Trick ‘r Treat (2007)
- Possessor (2020)
- Goodnight Mommy (2014)
- The House of the Devil (2009)
- We Need to Talk About Kevin (2011)
- The Autopsy of Jane Doe (2016)
- Tenebrae (1982)
- Starry Eyes (2014)
- Hellraiser (1987)
- REC (2007)
- Stake Land (2010)
- We Are Still Here (2015)
- The Lost Boys (1987)
- Grave Encounters (2011)
- Black Christmas (1974)
- The Howling (1981)
- Night of the Demons (1988)
- House on Haunted Hill (1959)
- You’re Next (2011)
- The Taking of Deborah Logan (2014)
- Late Phases (2014)
- Sleepaway Camp (1983)
- Tourist Trap (1979)
- Child’s Play (1988)
- The Last Man on Earth (1964)
- 1BR (2019)
- Intruder (1989)
- American Mary (2012)
- Housebound (2014)
- Bone Tomahawk (2015)
- Gonjiam: Haunted Asylum (2018)
- Bad Moon (1996)
- Dr. Terror’s House of Horrors (1965)
- Better Watch Out (2016)
- Asylum (1972)
- Hellbound: Hellraiser II (1988)
- Terror Train (1980)
- Creepshow 2 (1987)
- The Void (2016)
- Hush (2016)
- Hell Night (1981)
- Hell House LLC (2015)
- Maniac Cop (1988)
Tubi hides a treasure trove of horror movies behind a chaotic interface. If you prefer a curated starting point to endless scrolling, this guide directs you to fifty standout films across eras and subgenres, all available on Tubi. Expect classics, cult favorites, international shocks and modern innovations — each entry includes the essentials so you can decide what to watch next.
Why Tubi matters for horror fans (and how to navigate it)
Tubi’s horror section is one of the largest free collections online. Nearly a thousand titles live there, but the platform offers limited filtering. That means gems sit beside obscure cuts and repeat language versions, so a little guidance saves hours.
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- Huge selection: more variety than many subscription services.
- Browsing friction: few subgenres or reliable sorting options.
- Best approach: use curated lists to zero in on top picks.
Top 50 horror films on Tubi you should watch first
The Changeling (1980)
- Director: Peter Medak
- Why watch: A moody haunted-house mystery anchored by a powerful lead performance.
A grieving composer relocates to an old mansion and unravels a decades-old conspiracy. The film builds dread slowly, favoring atmosphere over jump scares.
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974)
- Director: Tobe Hooper
- Why watch: Raw, relentless, and foundational to American shock cinema.
Minimalist filmmaking and abrasive sound design create a lived-in nightmare that redefined modern horror.
Day of the Dead (1985)
- Director: George A. Romero
- Why watch: A darker, more scientific take on Romero’s zombie mythos.
Trapped survivors, conflicting agendas and inventive practical effects make this a standout in the series.
The Wailing (2016)
- Director: Na Hong-jin
- Why watch: An unsettling South Korean thriller that mixes folklore, detective work and spiritual dread.
It trades obvious scares for corrosive uncertainty, leaving viewers haunted by its moral questions.
The Babadook (2014)
- Director: Jennifer Kent
- Why watch: A psychological monster story about grief and motherhood.
Stylized and emotionally raw, it transforms childhood terror into a powerful human drama.
The Invitation (2016)
- Director: Karyn Kusama
- Why watch: Slow-burn tension that turns a dinner party into a study of loss and suspicion.
Everything is weighed toward character and unease rather than spectacle, leading to a charged final act.
Let Me In (2010)
- Director: Matt Reeves
- Why watch: A tender, chilling remake that preserves the original’s emotional center.
A lonely boy finds an unlikely companion with a dark secret. The film balances horror and melancholy beautifully.
Trick ‘r Treat (2007)
- Director: Michael Dougherty
- Why watch: An anthology celebrating Halloween’s myths and rituals.
Interlocking stories and a memorable holiday mascot make this a seasonal favorite packed with charm.
Possessor (2020)
- Director: Brandon Cronenberg
- Why watch: A visceral, cerebral sci-fi horror that explores identity and violence.
Visually striking and morally unsettling, it’s a modern body-horror statement.
Goodnight Mommy (2014)
- Directors: Veronika Franz & Severin Fiala
- Why watch: Dismaying tension inside a sunlit home. The story probes trust and identity.
Two boys confront a mother who returns bandaged from surgery. The film makes domestic suspicion into pure dread.
The House of the Devil (2009)
- Director: Ti West
- Why watch: Retro pacing and a patient buildup culminate in a brutal payoff.
Intentionally slow and deliberately nostalgic, it rewards viewers who enjoy mood over immediacy.
We Need to Talk About Kevin (2011)
- Director: Lynne Ramsay
- Why watch: A haunting portrait of a family fractured by violence.
More psychological drama than jump-scare horror, it asks hard questions about nature and responsibility.
The Autopsy of Jane Doe (2016)
- Director: André Øvredal
- Why watch: A claustrophobic, idea-driven mystery set in a morgue.
Simple premise. Effective scares. The film slowly peels back unsettling secrets beneath a corpse’s skin.
Tenebrae (1982)
- Director: Dario Argento
- Why watch: A stylistically bold giallo that interrogates violence and its audience.
Visual flair, twisted plotting and a nerve-jangling score make this an Argento highlight.
Starry Eyes (2014)
- Director: Kevin Kölsch
- Why watch: A brutal satire about fame that turns into visceral body horror.
Ambition and insecurity drive a harrowing physical and psychological transformation.
Hellraiser (1987)
- Director: Clive Barker
- Why watch: Visionary horror about forbidden pleasures and otherworldly tormentors.
Introduces a unique mythology and a memorable antagonist, blending erotic and macabre elements.
REC (2007)
- Directors: Jaume Balagueró & Paco Plaza
- Why watch: A tight, terrifying found-footage thriller set in an apartment building.
Unrelenting intensity and a stuck-camera perspective create a suffocating sense of panic.
Stake Land (2010)
- Director: Jim Mickle
- Why watch: A lean, character-forward post-apocalyptic vampire road movie.
Sparse landscapes and strong performances lift this vampire survival tale above many low-budget peers.
We Are Still Here (2015)
- Director: Ted Geoghegan
- Why watch: Gothic chills meet explosive gore in this homage to Italian horror.
Grief drives a couple to a haunted New England house with bloody consequences.
The Lost Boys (1987)
- Director: Joel Schumacher
- Why watch: Teen vampire cool, ’80s nostalgia and catchy soundtrack.
Part horror, part teen movie, it remains a fun, stylish take on vampire lore.
Grave Encounters (2011)
- Directors: Colin Minihan & Stuart Ortiz
- Why watch: A smart parody-turned-sincere found-footage haunt.
It cleverly satirizes ghost-hunting shows before delivering authentic chills.
Black Christmas (1974)
- Director: Bob Clark
- Why watch: An early slasher that helped define genre conventions.
Sinister phone calls and POV stalking set the template for many slashers to come.
The Howling (1981)
- Director: Joe Dante
- Why watch: A classic werewolf film with top-tier practical effects.
Grisly transformations and a mix of humor and horror make it an ’80s werewolf essential.
Night of the Demons (1988)
- Director: Kevin S. Tenney
- Why watch: A raunchy, effects-heavy late-’80s party-horror romp.
Campy, gory and enthusiastic, it’s ideal for Halloween marathons.
House on Haunted Hill (1959)
- Director: William Castle
- Why watch: Campy fun with Vincent Price and old-school gimmicks.
Graffitied with classic showmanship, this is vintage haunted-house entertainment.
You’re Next (2011)
- Director: Adam Wingard
- Why watch: A home-invasion thriller that flips expectations with blood-soaked ingenuity.
Resourceful final girl scenes and sharp set pieces elevate this tense slasher hybrid.
The Taking of Deborah Logan (2014)
- Director: Adam Robitel
- Why watch: A found-footage medical horror that grows into full-blown supernatural terror.
It starts clinically and ends disturbingly, blurring disease and demonic influence.
Late Phases (2014)
- Director: Adrian García Bogliano
- Why watch: A sentimental, character-rich werewolf tale with a standout lead.
An aging, blind veteran hunts lycanthropes in a retirement community. It’s heartfelt and brutal.
Sleepaway Camp (1983)
- Director: Robert Hiltzik
- Why watch: A slasher with one of the most talked-about twists in genre history.
80s camp vibes, creative kills and a finale that still shocks viewers.
Tourist Trap (1979)
- Director: David Schmoeller
- Why watch: Creepy mannequins and telekinesis combine into a surreal, unnerving thriller.
The film leans into eccentric atmosphere and lingering unease rather than conventional thrills.
Child’s Play (1988)
- Director: Tom Holland
- Why watch: Origin of an icon: Chucky’s blend of voodoo and dark humor.
Brad Dourif’s voice work and a grounded approach make this killer-doll movie memorable.
The Last Man on Earth (1964)
- Directors: Ubaldo Ragona & Sidney Salkow
- Why watch: A moody adaptation of Matheson’s I Am Legend starring Vincent Price.
Atmospheric and influential, it shaped later visions of the infected and otherness.
1BR (2019)
- Director: David Marmor
- Why watch: A claustrophobic thriller about cult-like housing control.
Sharp social commentary meets tense survival storytelling in an apartment-block setting.
Intruder (1989)
- Director: Scott Spiegel
- Why watch: A supermarket slasher packed with gruesome, practical kills.
Filmed in a real store overnight, its creative set pieces stand out among late-’80s slashers.
American Mary (2012)
- Directors: Jen & Sylvia Soska
- Why watch: A provocative take on body modification and revenge.
Katharine Isabelle anchors a film that mixes transgressive aesthetics with dark humor.
Housebound (2014)
- Director: Gerard Johnstone
- Why watch: A New Zealand blend of ghost mystery and black comedy.
It subverts expectations with clever plotting and a heartfelt lead performance.
Bone Tomahawk (2015)
- Director: S. Craig Zahler
- Why watch: A brutal horror-western with strong acting and shocking violence.
Slow-burn frontier storytelling gives way to some of the most unforgiving gore in modern indie horror.
Gonjiam: Haunted Asylum (2018)
- Director: Jung Bum-shik
- Why watch: A Korean found-footage film that uses tension and set design to terrify.
Its ascent from online creepiness to full-blown terror makes it a standout in recent Asian horror.
Bad Moon (1996)
- Director: Eric Red
- Why watch: A pulpier, underrated werewolf feature with practical creature effects.
Loud, fun and occasionally absurd, it delivers classic monster-movie thrills.
Dr. Terror’s House of Horrors (1965)
- Director: Freddie Francis
- Why watch: Classic British anthology horror with a memorable framing device.
Good-natured scares and an all-star cast make this a charming anthology pick.
Better Watch Out (2016)
- Director: Chris Peckover
- Why watch: Holiday-set home invasion with a twist on adolescent behavior and menace.
Darkly comic and vicious, it plays on how youthful impulses can morph into something dangerous.
Asylum (1972)
- Director: Roy Ward Baker
- Why watch: An Amicus anthology with polished storytelling and eerie moments.
Several tight segments deliver different shades of Gothic and psychological horror.
Hellbound: Hellraiser II (1988)
- Director: Tony Randel
- Why watch: A surreal, more psychedelic entry in the Hellraiser mythos.
It pushes the franchise’s visual and conceptual boundaries further into the grotesque.
Terror Train (1980)
- Director: Roger Spottiswoode
- Why watch: A contained slasher set aboard a moving train with Jamie Lee Curtis.
A tense premise and clever mask gimmick keep suspense high throughout the ride.
Creepshow 2 (1987)
- Director: Michael Gornick
- Why watch: An anthology that favors gross-out fun and Stephen King’s darker sketches.
While not as iconic as the original, its segments offer memorable, visceral moments.
The Void (2016)
- Directors: Steven Kostanski & Jeremy Gillespie
- Why watch: A Lovecraft-tinged hospital nightmare with ambitious practical effects.
Its cosmic scope and grotesque imagery reward viewers who enjoy body horror and surreal dread.
Hush (2016)
- Director: Mike Flanagan
- Why watch: A taut home-invasion thriller featuring a deaf protagonist.
Minimalist setup, focused suspense and a strong central performance create an intense experience.
Hell Night (1981)
- Director: Tom DeSimone
- Why watch: A hazing-night slasher mixing old-house atmosphere with slasher beats.
Linda Blair leads a moody and occasionally gothic slasher variant with a memorable finale.
Hell House LLC (2015)
- Director: Stephen Cognetti
- Why watch: Found-footage that captures haunted attraction paranoia with efficiency.
Low budget, high tension: an effective haunted attraction gone very wrong.
Maniac Cop (1988)
- Director: William Lustig
- Why watch: A fusion of slasher tropes and urban crime thriller energy.
Oddball premise and cult appeal give this film a distinct late-’80s flavor.









