Netflix is preparing a major rethink of its mobile app, and yes, it’s headed straight into TikTok territory. Executives signaled on the latest earnings call that a redesigned interface will debut later in 2026, emphasizing vertical video, rapid discovery, and a tighter loop between clips and full-length viewing. The move reflects a broader competitive reality: Netflix isn’t just battling streamers anymore, it’s fighting for the same minutes that Instagram and TikTok dominate.
What Will Actually Look Different in the App
Expect the home experience to lean into a vertically scrolling feed of snackable clips sourced from shows, films, live programs, and new content types. Tap a clip to jump directly into the episode or movie, save it for later, or keep swiping to sample more. Think of it as “micro-trailers” with intent: faster previews, clearer calls to action, and fewer taps between interest and play.

Netflix has already reworked its TV interface to streamline tiles, improve readability, and push more relevant recommendations. The company says mobile will follow the same philosophy: a base design that can be continuously A/B tested and iterated. Expect prominent audio controls, smarter captions for silent browsing, and adaptive layouts that surface different modules—downloads, continue watching, or live events—depending on your behavior.
Under the hood, the redesign likely leans on dynamic previews and on-device caching to keep swipes instant, while the recommender system blends your watch history with scene-level metadata (characters, tone, pacing) to queue clips that feel personal rather than generic.
Why the Shift to Vertical Video Is Happening Now
Time spent has migrated to short-form feeds on mobile, and Netflix wants a piece of that attention. Data.ai has reported sustained growth in time spent within short-form video apps globally, and Nielsen’s The Gauge has repeatedly shown streaming as the dominant share of TV usage in the U.S. The implication: audiences are primed to discover long-form stories via short, mobile-first moments.
Netflix leadership has also started naming social platforms as direct competitors. On the latest investor call, executives pointed to Instagram’s pull on viewers, underscoring that “TV” is now a format-agnostic fight across phones, connected TVs, and everything in between. A vertical feed gives Netflix a familiar on-ramp—especially for users who open apps for a quick scroll rather than a 45-minute episode.
Podcasts, Sports, and Clips Will Play a Bigger Role
Netflix has been expanding into podcasts, a medium tailor-made for viral vertical clips. Expect to see creator-style highlights from video podcasts woven into the feed, with seamless jumps to full episodes or audio-only playback if you’re on the go. Short-form cuts can also extend the life of scripted series, documentaries, or stand-up specials, turning memorable scenes into discovery assets.

Live and event programming changes the calculus further. With NFL games coming to the service and major entertainment franchises on deck, quick highlights, behind-the-scenes moments, and recaps are natural ingredients for a vertical stream. It’s a strategy YouTube refined with Shorts—use clips as a funnel into longer sessions—and Netflix is poised to adapt it for premium, licensed, and original content.
Discovery Ads And Personalization Will Tighten
A vertical feed is a discovery engine, but it’s also an ad canvas. Netflix’s ad-supported plan has grown rapidly—at its 2024 upfronts, the company disclosed 40 million global monthly active users—and a scrollable format creates more moments to insert brand-safe, context-aware ads without interrupting full episodes. Expect formats like sponsored clip slots, interactive cards, and “watch next” prompts that feel native to the feed.
For personalization, the redesign could amplify Netflix’s long-running strengths. Instead of recommending a title, the app can recommend the precise scene most likely to hook you. Over time, the system will learn whether you respond to cast-led clips, high-action beats, or comedic moments and weight the feed accordingly. That means better cold starts for new shows and fewer abandoned tiles.
Timeline, Tests, and What to Watch for Next
Netflix says the mobile overhaul will begin rolling out later in 2026, with the same iterate-and-improve approach used on TV. Watch for early regional tests, opt-in experiments, and phased feature flags that add capabilities like gesture scrubbing, background audio for podcasts, and stronger cross-device handoff from phone to TV.
The bottom line: your Netflix app is going to feel faster, more social in its cadence, and closer to the way you already browse video on your phone. If the company executes, the vertical feed won’t just be a look—it will be a new on-ramp into the Netflix catalog, designed to turn seconds of curiosity into hours of viewing.
