Polygon’s piece on Project Hail Mary landing on streaming surprised the people still searching iTunes rentals for it. Sci-fi catalogues are scattered across more apps than ever, and the streaming wars have pushed half the genre behind a different paywall than the other. We tested seven sci-fi streaming apps for Android to find which ones carry the most of the genre, where the headline new releases land, and which free options are worth keeping installed for the deep classic catalogue.
What to look for in a sci-fi streaming app
Sci-fi is one of the most exclusive-dependent genres on streaming. A single show or franchise can lock you into a service for a year. The factors we weighed:
- Originals slate. What each platform produces in sci-fi specifically (Stranger Things on Netflix, Andor on Disney+, The Expanse on Prime Video, Severance on Apple TV+).
- Catalogue depth. Back-catalogue licensing for older sci-fi (Twilight Zone reruns, Black Mirror seasons, classic films).
- Download for offline. Long flights and commutes matter; not every service supports them.
- Free tiers and ads. Tubi and Pluto TV give an ad-supported sci-fi catalogue at no cost.
- HDR and audio. Dolby Vision and Atmos drive the recent sci-fi releases that look best.
Quick comparison
| App | Best for | Free plan | Starting price | Downloads | HDR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Netflix | Best overall sci-fi originals | No | Around $7.99/mo with ads | Yes | Dolby Vision (Premium) |
| Disney+ | Best for Star Wars and Marvel | No | Around $9.99/mo with ads | Yes | Dolby Vision |
| Prime Video | Best for sci-fi back-catalogue | With Prime | About $8.99/mo standalone | Yes | Dolby Vision |
| Max | Best for HBO sci-fi prestige | No | Around $9.99/mo with ads | Yes (paid tiers) | Dolby Vision (paid) |
| Paramount+ | Best for Star Trek | Yes (Essential ad tier) | Around $7.99/mo | Yes (Premium) | Dolby Vision (limited) |
| Crunchyroll | Best for sci-fi anime | Yes (ad-supported) | $7.99/mo Fan | Yes (Mega Fan) | Standard HD |
| Pluto TV | Best free live sci-fi channels | Yes | Free | No (live only) | Standard HD |
The 7 best sci-fi streaming apps for Android
1. Netflix, best overall sci-fi originals
Netflix has the deepest sci-fi originals slate by volume: Stranger Things, Black Mirror, Love Death + Robots, Lost in Space, Altered Carbon, 3 Body Problem, Atypical, Squid Game (sci-fi-adjacent), and seasonal returns of franchise picks like Arcane (sci-fi fantasy). The recent slate has leaned into prestige adaptations alongside lighter genre fare, and the Android app handles 4K HDR with Dolby Vision on the Premium tier.
Where it falls short: Standard with ads tier blocks downloads. Netflix retires originals quietly, so some shows you remembered watching aren’t there anymore. Pricing has climbed twice in the last two years.
Pricing:
- Standard with ads: around $7.99/month
- Standard: around $17.99/month, ad-free, downloads
- Premium: around $24.99/month, 4K, Dolby Atmos
Platforms: Android, iOS, Web, Smart TV
Bottom line: Pick Netflix if you want the largest active sci-fi originals slate and you only pick one service.
2. Disney+, best for Star Wars and Marvel
Disney+ is the home of the Star Wars and Marvel cinematic universes, plus the older Disney sci-fi catalogue (Tron, Flight of the Navigator) and a growing slate of National Geographic sci-fact content. Andor, Ahsoka, The Mandalorian, Skeleton Crew, Loki, WandaVision, and the upcoming VisionQuest all sit here. Multi-language audio tracks are unusually generous, and the Android app supports Dolby Vision and Atmos on most originals.
Where it falls short: Outside the two big franchises, the sci-fi catalogue is thin. Account-sharing crackdowns have pushed prices up for households.
Pricing:
- With ads: around $9.99/month
- Premium: around $15.99/month, ad-free, downloads, 4K
Platforms: Android, iOS, Web, Smart TV
Bottom line: Pick Disney+ if Star Wars or Marvel is the headline sci-fi reason you’re paying for streaming.
3. Prime Video, best for sci-fi back-catalogue
Prime Video for sci-fi streaming carries The Expanse (acquired after Syfy cancelled it), The Boys, Fallout, Upload, The Peripheral, and the ongoing Tolkien adaptation Rings of Power. The back-catalogue is where Prime quietly wins, with rotating libraries of older sci-fi films plus rental access to most major theatrical releases. The Android app supports Dolby Vision and offline downloads on the standard plan.
Where it falls short: Ad-tier defaults are now opt-out, so make sure you check the toggle. Many “available on Prime” titles are actually rentals or third-party channels at extra cost.
Pricing:
- With Prime membership: around $14.99/month or $139/year (includes shipping)
- Prime Video standalone: around $8.99/month
- Ad-free upgrade: about $2.99 extra per month
Platforms: Android, iOS, Web, Smart TV
Bottom line: Pick Prime Video if you already pay for Prime shipping or you want The Expanse and Fallout in one library.
4. Max, best for HBO sci-fi prestige
Max (the rebranded HBO Max) for sci-fi streaming covers Westworld, Foundation companion fare, Raised by Wolves (cancelled but still available), and the Dune Prophecy series. The DC slate sits here too, plus a deep film library that pulls from Warner Bros’ century-deep catalogue (2001: A Space Odyssey, Blade Runner, Mad Max). Recent additions like Project Hail Mary land here for streaming debuts. Max’s Android app handles offline downloads on paid tiers.
Where it falls short: Ad tier blocks downloads. Library has shrunk noticeably since the HBO-to-Max rebrand and the cull of Discovery+ content.
Pricing:
- With ads: around $9.99/month
- Standard: around $16.99/month, ad-free, downloads, full HD
- Premium: around $20.99/month, 4K, Dolby Atmos
Platforms: Android, iOS, Web, Smart TV
Bottom line: Pick Max if you want HBO-grade prestige sci-fi and Warner Bros’ film catalogue.
5. Paramount+, best for Star Trek
Paramount+ is the only place to watch new Star Trek. Discovery, Strange New Worlds, Lower Decks, Picard, Section 31, and Starfleet Academy all stream here, plus the back catalogue stretching from The Original Series through Voyager. The wider Paramount+ library adds Halo, Tulsa King-adjacent thrillers, and licensed older sci-fi films. The app handles offline downloads on Premium and HDR on flagship originals.
Where it falls short: Outside Trek, the sci-fi catalogue is light. Ad-tier limits cap downloads.
Pricing:
- Essential with ads: around $7.99/month
- Premium: around $12.99/month, no ads, downloads, live TV
Platforms: Android, iOS, Web, Smart TV
Bottom line: Pick Paramount+ if you’re a Star Trek fan or you watch the Yellowstone-adjacent slate.
6. Crunchyroll, best for sci-fi anime
Crunchyroll for sci-fi streaming is the largest licensed anime library on Android, and anime is where a huge chunk of modern sci-fi storytelling lives (Steins;Gate, Cowboy Bebop, Ghost in the Shell, Dr. Stone, Trigun Stampede, Vivy, Pluto). Most simulcasts land within hours of Japan airing, in English subbed and many dubbed. The Android app handles offline downloads on Mega Fan and supports Chromecast.
Where it falls short: Free tier is heavily ad-supported with a one-week delay on new episodes. Catalogue is anime-only, no live-action shows.
Pricing:
- Free: ad-supported, one-week delay on simulcasts
- Fan: $7.99/month
- Mega Fan: $9.99/month, offline downloads
- Ultimate Fan: $14.99/month
Platforms: Android, iOS, Web, Smart TV
Bottom line: Pick Crunchyroll if sci-fi anime is a meaningful share of what you watch.
7. Pluto TV, best free live sci-fi channels
Pluto TV for sci-fi streaming runs free, ad-supported live channels dedicated to genre fare, including Star Trek, Doctor Who, The Twilight Zone, MST3K, and B-movie sci-fi blocks. The on-demand catalogue rotates a long tail of older sci-fi films. No account is required to watch, no subscription, no credit card. The Android app supports Chromecast and works well on TV apps too.
Where it falls short: Heavily ad-supported. Live channels mean you can’t pause or rewind beyond a short window on most streams.
Pricing:
- Free, ad-supported
Platforms: Android, iOS, Web, Smart TV
Bottom line: Pick Pluto TV if you want free Star Trek and Twilight Zone reruns whenever you open the app.
How to pick the right one
- If you only pay for one service: Netflix
- If you want Star Wars or Marvel: Disney+
- If you want The Expanse, Fallout, or The Boys: Prime Video
- If you want Westworld and HBO prestige sci-fi: Max
- If you want Star Trek: Paramount+
- If sci-fi anime is your priority: Crunchyroll
- If you want free background sci-fi: Pluto TV
A common stack for genre fans: one tentpole subscription (Netflix or Max), one franchise subscription (Disney+ for Star Wars or Paramount+ for Trek), and Pluto TV as the free backdrop.
FAQ
What is the best free sci-fi streaming app?
Pluto TV is the strongest free option for sci-fi on Android, with dedicated 24/7 channels for Star Trek, The Twilight Zone, MST3K, and Doctor Who. Tubi also carries a deep sci-fi back-catalogue at no cost.
Where can I watch Project Hail Mary?
Project Hail Mary made its streaming debut on Max in 2026, according to Polygon’s coverage. The title is included with the Standard and Premium Max tiers; the ad tier may carry it with restrictions.
Where can I stream Star Trek on Android?
Paramount+ is the home of new Star Trek series including Discovery, Strange New Worlds, Lower Decks, and Picard, plus the back catalogue from The Original Series through Enterprise.
Does Disney+ have all the Star Wars shows?
Yes. Every Star Wars film and live-action series (The Mandalorian, Andor, Ahsoka, Skeleton Crew, Obi-Wan Kenobi, The Acolyte) plus the upcoming releases sit on Disney+.
Can I download sci-fi shows for offline viewing?
Yes, on Netflix Standard or Premium, Disney+ Premium, Prime Video, Max Standard or higher, Paramount+ Premium, and Crunchyroll Mega Fan. The ad-supported tiers on most services block downloads.