You can watch the Fast & Furious movies on several major streaming and digital platforms, but availability changes by country and over time.

Main streaming options (early 2026)

  • Netflix has at least the first movie, “The Fast and the Furious” (2001), in its catalog in many regions.
  • Peacock often carries several mid‑series entries like “Fast & Furious 6,” “Furious 7,” and “F9,” as well as spinoff “Hobbs & Shaw,” though lineups rotate.
  • Tubi sometimes offers older entries such as the 2001 original and “2 Fast 2 Furious” free with ads.
  • Max (formerly HBO Max) and Apple TV+ have, at different times, hosted later films like “F8: The Fate of the Furious,” but these can move between services.

Most titles are also available to rent or buy on:

  • Amazon Prime Video
  • YouTube Movies
  • Apple iTunes / Apple TV app

These stores typically have the full series, including “Fast X,” even when subscription services don’t.

Quick HTML table of common options

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Movie Typical subscription services Rent/Buy (digital stores)
The Fast and the Furious (2001) Netflix in many regions; sometimes Tubi with ads.Amazon, YouTube, iTunes/Apple TV.
2 Fast 2 Furious (2003) Often on Netflix; sometimes Tubi.Amazon, YouTube, iTunes/Apple TV.
Tokyo Drift (2006) Rotates between Max/Peacock and others; sometimes Tubi.Amazon, YouTube, iTunes/Apple TV.
Fast & Furious (2009) Has streamed on Max and Peacock in recent lineups.Amazon, YouTube, iTunes/Apple TV.
Fast Five (2011) Appears on Peacock or cable on‑demand (TNT/TBS/truTV bundles).Amazon, YouTube, iTunes/Apple TV.
Fast & Furious 6 (2013) Peacock in many regions.Amazon, YouTube, iTunes/Apple TV.
Furious 7 (2015) Peacock or Tubi at various times.Amazon, YouTube, iTunes/Apple TV.
The Fate of the Furious (F8) (2017) Has streamed on Apple TV+ and other rotating services.Amazon, YouTube, iTunes/Apple TV.
Hobbs & Shaw (2019) Frequently on Peacock.Amazon, YouTube, iTunes/Apple TV.
F9 (2021) Peacock in many markets.Amazon, YouTube, iTunes/Apple TV.
Fast X (2023) Newer entry; may sit on a premium service (such as Max or similar) depending on region.Prime Video, iTunes, YouTube for rent or purchase.

Region and “right now” caveat

Licensing changes fast, and exact availability depends on your country and the date. For the most accurate, up‑to‑the‑minute answer where you live, it helps to:

  1. Search the title directly inside Netflix, Prime Video, Peacock, Max, and Apple TV.
  2. Use a streaming‑availability tracker (sites similar to JustWatch or TV Guide are commonly recommended in fan discussions) and set your country to see what’s included with subscription vs. rental.

If you tell me your country or specific movie (for example, only “Fast X”), I can narrow this down further in a follow‑up answer.