Best Apps to Find Where Shows and Movies Are Streaming - Consumer Reports
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    Best Apps for Finding Where Shows and Movies Are Streaming

    Free apps and websites now search hundreds of channels and services to help you find favorite films and programs

    Search bar with app icons from left to right: JustWatch, Qewd, Reelgood, TV Time and Watchworthy
    These apps can help solve a modern problem—finding out where your favorite shows and movies are streaming.
    Illustration: Consumer Reports

    Here’s an issue that’s become a bone of contention between my wife and me: We want to watch a TV show or film that’s streaming but can’t remember whether it’s on a subscription service, such as Amazon Prime, Apple TV+, Disney+, Hulu, or Netflix; a free service, such as Pluto TV or Tubi; or one of the network apps, such as Max, Paramount+, or Peacock. I don’t mind searching around a bit, but my wife finds sifting through each service painfully tedious.

    There are easier ways to find out what’s streaming.

    Streaming media players, including Amazon Fire TV, Apple TV, and Roku, will look through various services to find specific titles. Many smart TVs now do the same. But the search functions aren’t always easy to use, and they can be limited in what they find. And so, I often rely on free websites and mobile apps that do a much better job of hunting.

    More on Streaming Services

    A few years ago, there were maybe a dozen apps or websites from which to choose, but the options have narrowed. Right now, I mainly use two: JustWatch and Reelgood, though I have tried out three more, TV Time, Watchworthy, and a newer app called Qewd. I haven’t yet spent all that much time with Qewd, but it does have some interesting social features.

    All five of these free tools search across multiple streaming services as well as some “TV Everywhere” apps that let you stream content that you’re already paying for through a cable or satellite TV subscription.

    Here’s how they compare.

    JustWatch

    Website, and Android and iOS Apps

    JustWatch has upped its game in recent years, greatly expanding by acquiring rival GoWatchIt. It has a large list of supported subscription services, including newer ones such as Apple TV+, Disney+, HBO Max, Paramount+, and Peacock. It also works with several free ad-supported ones.

    The service is easy to use: You enter the movie or show you want to watch and JustWatch will tell you where you can stream it. If it’s available to rent or buy, it will show you where to find the lowest price. JustWatch will also make movie and TV show recommendations based on what people with similar tastes are watching.

    The site’s home page shows you what’s new and popular. You can add TV shows and movies to your watchlist by using a bookmark icon, and you can limit searches to services you already use by choosing them from a row of icons. A feature called TV Show Tracking lets you track shows you’ve started watching or saved to your watchlist. If you’ve watched all the episodes of a show, you can get an alert when a new episode or season becomes available.

    Screenshot of the JustWatch website.
    JustWatch organizes titles in dozens of ways, including by genre, what's highly rated or trending, and what's new to a service.

    Source: JustWatch Source: JustWatch

    JustWatch organizes titles in dozens of ways, including by genre, what’s highly rated or trending, and what’s new to a service. It can even offer selections based on what mood you’re in. Now that many movie theaters are open again, JustWatch also shows you the top five movies currently playing, and provides alerts when they become available for streaming on one of your services.

    JustWatch now has a Play on TV feature, which lets you choose and play content for your television right from the smartphone app. You need to have JustWatch apps on both your smartphone and the TV for that to work, and both need to be signed on to the same WiFi network. You choose the program or movie on the smartphone app, tap Play on TV, and the JustWatch TV app launches the selected streaming service. The TV app is available for Android and Google TV, Apple TV, Fire TV, LG and Samsung smart TVs, and Xbox consoles. It also works with Roku devices using the smartphone app by itself; you don’t need the JustWatch app on the Roku.

    You can access JustWatch using a web browser on your computer and through Android and iOS phone apps. One app exclusive is that it can give you daily deal updates on rentals and purchases.

    While JustWatch is free, you can opt for a Pro version ($2.50 a month) that removes banner ads, gives you dozens more custom lists beyond the two free ones, and provides enhanced filtering options.

    Reelgood

    Website, and Android and iOS/tvOS Apps

    Reelgood has greatly expanded the number of streaming services and TV channels it tracks, too, now covering over 150—and counting. It’s the app I currently use the most.

    When you first sign up, you check each of the services you have access to, and Reelgood searches across all of them. (It helped me realize that I now subscribe to a dozen streaming services—yikes!) You can add “free” as a search item, and it will look for free content from networks, along with ad-supported platforms such as Crackle, and PlutoTV.

    Reelgood covers all the major subscription services (Amazon Prime Video, Hulu, and Netflix); niche ones like Acorn TV and Mubi; free services such as Freevee, PlutoTV, and Tubi; and premium channels, such as Max and Showtime. It also includes Apple TV+, Disney+, HBO Max, Paramount+, and Peacock. Reelgood will also check TV Everywhere channels you can stream if you subscribe to a traditional pay-TV package. There’s even a section where you can find out where to rent or buy newer movies from pay-per-view services such as Amazon, Apple iTunes, and Vudu.

    You can browse by title or genre, or simply scroll through rows of recommended content organized under headings such as “Popular Movies," "Trending TV Shows,” “Top 10 This Week," and "2024 Most Anticipated." You also explore what’s new, what’s coming soon, and what’s leaving soon, to help you prioritize what to watch next. Once you find something you want to view, you can add it to your watch list, rate it, see the trailer, or mark it seen. If it’s available, just press the play button and it will launch that service with your show pulled up.

    Screenshot of the Reelgood website
    Using the Reelgood app's Play to TV feature, you can click on any content your search turns up to start watching on your smart TV.

    Source: Reelgood Source: Reelgood

    The service also lets you follow shows and movies. For TV shows, click “Track Series" on the show’s product card to build a lineup of unwatched episodes. For movies, click the “Want to See” button on a title to add it to a watchlist. Your “Watch Next” section will let you know when new episodes or movies are available.

    Reelgood will now remember where you were on programs from more than 150 services, so you can pick up right where you left off.

    Reelgood’s Play to TV feature lets you play anything available on the Reelgood app directly on your smart TV just by clicking on the icon. Right now this feature is supported on Android, Fire TV, LG, and Roku smart TVs. When you select a program, it shows you a list of supported devices on your WiFi network, and you simply tap the one where you’d like to play it. You can use the app as a basic TV remote control.

    You can access Reelgood online via its website, and it now has apps for both Apple iOS and Google Android smartphones as well as for Apple TV (tvOS), Android and Fire TVs, plus LG smart TVs. There’s no Roku app yet, but you can use the Reelgood mobile app on your phone to control a Roku TV or streaming player.

    TV Time

    Website, and Android and iOS Apps

    This service, self-described as a TV show and movie calendar with a strong social element, is newer to me; it lets you track shows and movies, discover which ones you should watch next, and get notifications when new ones that you want to watch become available. You can locate new movies or TV shows using the search bar, or find new content using a Discover icon at the bottom of the page. You can’t, however, watch shows directly from the app.

    Every user gets their own profile. When you visit for the first time, you’re asked to pick the shows and movies you either watch or plan to watch from a scrolling list. You can also note where you left off on a TV series, so you’ll start an episode right after the one you viewed, or where you left off in the show if you didn’t finish it.

    Screenshot of the TV Time website
    TV Time asks you to choose which shows you're watching or would like to watch.

    Source: TV Time Source: TV Time

    The app has two main sections: Watchlist, which has the shows and movies you track, and Upcoming, which posts on a calendar when the next episodes or seasons of shows you’re tracking will be available. In addition to tracking content and letting you know where to watch it, you’ll get recommendations based on what you’ve watched. Once you mark a show as watched, you can rate it or attach an emoticon, and indicate your favorite characters.

    Using the Discover feature, you can get program recommendations based on the shows or genres you’ve viewed, or see which movies and series are trending among other users of the service. A “Discover More” section lets you filter your search by genre, status, and more. You can also see which shows or movies have been watched by your friends, and what other fans of the show are saying without getting spoilers. You can earn various “badges” for your profile by commenting and interacting with the TV Time community.

    When you make a selection, you’ll get sent to the streaming app, but there’s no option to play the program directly on your TV as you can do with other services.

    Watchworthy

    Android and iOS Apps

    Like the other apps, Watchworthy allows you to find shows by choosing the services you subscribe to or use. What makes it stand out is that it does a nice job of providing personalized, crowdsourced recommendations from parent company Ranker. You can build a watchlist of shows from TV networks and more than 200 streaming services, including popular ones such as Amazon Prime, Apple TV+, Disney+, Hulu, Paramount+, Peacock, and Netflix. Right now the service doesn’t track movies, but the company says that feature is on its radar.

    At the start, you spend about a minute swiping left and right, liking and disliking shows. (You can swipe up if you’re not quite sure.) Then Watchworthy begins to send recommendations based on your responses. Each show on the list of recommendations features a “Worthy” score that predicts how much you’ll love it. (You can find these shows in a "Worthy" section of the app; the higher the Worthy score, the more likely you’ll enjoy the show.) You add recommendations to your watchlist by clicking on a plus sign.

    New features include “Worthy Services,” which can help you figure out which streaming services are worth keeping based on their content libraries, and “Watch Together,” which lets you become "friends" with other Watchworthy users to compile a shared watchlist based on everyone’s personal tastes.

    Screenshots of WatchWorthy
    Watchworthy's features include a watchlist and crowdsourced recommendations.

    Source: Watchworthy Source: Watchworthy

    Like the other services, Watchworthy lets you limit your results to shows from services you have access to. You can filter shows by air date, streaming service and genre, or even by MPAA rating if you have kids. There are also curated content selections based on themes such as The Weekly Buzz, Workplace Comedies, Funniest Shows, or British Sitcoms, organized by their Worthy score. Once you select a show, you can start watching it either directly from your device or by casting it to your TV.

    While the company has been promising to add movie recommendations to the app, that hasn’t happened yet. Right now, Watchworthy is available as either an Android or iOS app, but the company says it will add apps later this year for additional devices, including Amazon Fire, Apple TV, and Roku streaming players.

    Qewd

    Android and iOS Apps

    The newest entry to this group, Qewd is a free app for Android and Apple mobile devices. It not only helps you find where shows and movies are streaming but also adds a social element that lets you get recommendations from your network of friends, family, and even brands and influencers you follow.

    When you download the app, you can enter the major streaming platforms you subscribe to and use most often, plus your favorite genres, and then sift through a list of free ad-supported services you use. In addition, users can create and share broad (“favorite comedies”) or specialized (“movies starring Keanu Reeves”) Qewd watchlists. Because Qewd connects to all streaming services it tracks, you can watch shows and movies with a single click.

    In addition to helping you find out where shows and movies are streaming, Qewd acts as a “concierge”—the company’s word—that lets you bookmark content, and access and watch all of the services you subscribe to, as well as TikTok and YouTube, directly from the app. And when content jumps from one service to another, Qewd will automatically update its lists, the company says, taking you to the platform that currently has the title.

    Screenshot of the QEWD website
    Qwed offers movie and TV show recommendations, including ones from friends.

    Source: QEWD Source: QEWD

    Like other apps, Qewd keeps track of what you watch and enjoy so that it can recommend movies and shows for you to try. But to get recommendations from family and friends for the “What Your Friends Are Watching” section, you have to share access to your contacts with Qewd—which not everyone is comfortable doing.

    Other features include the ability to collect videos from anywhere on the internet—YouTube, Vimeo, Reddit, Twitter, etc.—and save them in your playlist for playback later. You can also curate personal watchlists and share them with friends, family members, colleagues, or those on social media sites.


    James K. Willcox

    James K. Willcox leads Consumer Reports’ coverage of TVs, streaming media services and devices, broadband internet service, and the digital divide. He's also a homeowner covering several home improvement categories, including power washers and decking. A veteran journalist, Willcox has written for Business Week, Cargo, Maxim, Men’s Journal, Popular Science, Rolling Stone, Sound & Vision, and others. At home, he’s often bent over his workbench building guitars or cranking out music on his 7.2-channel home theater sound system.