- On this page:
- Content
- Using Tubi
- Features & Quality
- Platforms
- Value
- Final Word
Tubi or not Tubi? That is the question I set out to answer in this Tubi review. I like streaming services, and I love a free price tag. However, I usually find that the content offered by free streaming services falls flat, especially when compared with the wide array of blockbuster and original content available on services like Max and Hulu.
When I saw that Tubi had partnerships with MGM, Paramount, and Lionsgate, they had my attention. I was hopeful that they would finally be the free service I’d been looking for. So how did they do against the big-name paid services? Do they even stand out amongst other free services like Pluto TV and Crackle? I was ready to find out, and I hope you are, too!
Tubi Pros and Cons
Pros
- Absolutely free
- Very infrequent commercials
- Available on all major streaming devices
- Lots of movies, including top titles featuring big stars
- Kids section and parental controls
- Seamless interface
Cons
- Most content is at least four years old
- No option to upgrade to an ad-free plan
- Many titles not in HD and none in 1080p or 4K
- Only live streaming content is “News on Tubi,” available only on select devices
- Limited selection of TV shows
What You Can Watch on Tubi
Tubi works like pretty much any other on-demand streaming service. You go to the website or download the app, and you are ready to start watching content. In other words, it’s like Netflix with ads. You can create an account (more on that later), but you don’t have to. The only content they have that is not on-demand is a relatively new feature called “News on Tubi” — a set of live streaming news channels that have only rolled out on a few devices at this point.
I came to Tubi looking for great content, and they did not disappoint. They don’t do original content, and most of their content is at least four years old. But those are limitations I’ve come to expect from free services. What I didn’t expect was the sheer number of movies that I’d been meaning to watch — and now had access to for free! Tubi says there are 20,000 titles on their service, and it certainly feels like that many to me.
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and its sequel, After Earth, and Batman vs. Robin all immediately got added to my watch list, along with about two dozen other movies. After scrolling a bit, I came across the “Not on Netflix” section, which had some more great options that – unsurprisingly – were not available on Netflix. These included films with Sasha Baron Cohen, Jason Statham, and Nicolas Cage.
Do you like reality TV? It’s okay, you can admit it here. I’ll admit to enjoying a cooking or singing show once in a while if you do. I think I found enough reality TV on Tubi to keep me going for quite a while. Two of Gordon Ramsay’s shows are there, as are The Masked Singer, Hoarders, The Bachelor, and many others.
Although reality TV is definitely where Tubi shines, that’s not all that I watched: As a sitcom junkie, I was also happy to see Anger Management and Grounded for Life in Tubi’s library, too.
If you are looking for classics, this is probably not the place to find them – the selection of older TV shows did not seem as extensive as those of other free streaming services.
I’m an unashamed cartoon fan, so I also looked into the Tubi Kids section. They have The Adventures of Batman – the ones from the 1960s! Once my nostalgia moment was over, I took a look through the rest of the section and found How to Train Your Dragon, Free Birds, and a few other favorites. Their anime section was also impressive for a free service, but it can’t compete with Crunchyroll. If you are looking for content for younger kids, Tubi does have preschool and baby sections as well.
How It Felt to Use Tubi
If you’ve used Netflix, you’ll feel right at home with the Tubi interface. It’s simple, clean, and very easy-to-use. In short: I love it.
The available titles are all displayed in categories either by genre or common options like “Most Popular” or “Recently Added”. Unlike with some services, there is no option to filter the titles or rearrange them by, for example, alphabetical order. There is, however, an option to search. Having tried out other free services that didn’t have this, Tubi reminded me just how important a search bar can be. I was immediately able to find all 12 Nicolas Cage movies that are on the service. I’m not sure if that’s good or bad, but I found them.
Browsing for TV shows turned out to be more difficult. Tubi’s web interface has TV shows mixed in with the movies instead of in their own section. Tubi seems to have far more movies than TV shows, so the shows tend to get lost in the mix. Fortunately, the mobile app has separate TV and movie sections, so I was able to find TV show options more easily there. This was the only significant feature of the mobile app that I couldn’t also find on the web browser app, but it was available on other streaming devices, like the Fire TV Stick.
It turned out this wasn’t the only usability feature that was missing on the in-browser app. When I started using my Fire TV Stick Tubi app, I noticed the additional menu options for categories and channels. The channels option was particularly exciting because it gave me the ability to find all of the Fox content, including titles that I had missed when browsing through Tubi’s library in my browser. I just hope Tubi brings these features to its in-browser app eventually!
I wanted to find other things to complain about with the interface, but I just couldn’t. Try as I might, nothing about it was glitchy or even cumbersome. The most critical thing I can think of to say is that the pause, rewind, and skip forward buttons sometimes appear over the closed captions. When I’m digging that deep for a complaint, I’m not sure I should even bother to complain at all. In my view, Tubi has a great interface that makes for an even greater user experience.
I’ve been pleasantly surprised by low commercial counts in free services before, but Tubi took it to a new level. I would often watch for more than 30 minutes without seeing a single commercial. When they did pop up, it was usually in groups of two to three. Don’t get me wrong, I’d rather that number was zero, but I consider Tubi’s ad load to be absolutely reasonable for a free service.
Tubi Features and Streaming Quality
The video quality on Tubi was decent, but it was nothing to write home about. Most titles are available in 720p HD, but none are in full 1080p HD. There are also several that are only in standard definition. In the browser app, you can adjust the video quality at will between whichever options are available. On other devices, there is no option to adjust, and some of the quality was clearly SD where I had hoped for HD.
Both the audio and closed caption languages seem to be limited to English in almost every case on Tubi, with the exception of a few Spanish-language movies and TV shows. I couldn’t find a single English title with non-English subtitle options. I also found several titles that didn’t have subtitles at all.
Tubi gives you full control over the closed captions wherever they’re available: You can change the background, size, color, font, and transparency at will. I usually don’t find features like these to be useful, but increasing the font size does have its advantages at times.
As with most free services, account creation is not required for Tubi. I went ahead and created one anyway to check out the features. If you are concerned with privacy, though, you could watch Tubi forever without signing up. Signing up for an account offers two main advantages for most users: the ability to mark items to watch later and the ability to pause a show and continue it later on the same or different devices.
If you’re a parent, I’d recommend creating an account: You’ll need one if you’re going to use Tubi’s parental control features. I was impressed that these features were included at all. This is another place where Tubi feels like more than just another free streaming service.
Tubi Platform Support
Tubi is available on pretty much any device you can think of. They have an in-browser app for your computer, mobile apps on iOS and Android, and apps for streaming devices like Roku and Chromecast. They even have apps for Xbox (Xbox One, Series X, and Series S) and PlayStation (Playstation 3 and 4).
The interfaces in Tubi’s apps do vary somewhat from device to device. In my opinion, the additional ways of looking for titles that are available on streaming devices make for a much more pleasant experience.
The only other major difference between the Tubi experiences on different platforms emerges when Tubi rolls out new features, which often appear on a select set of devices early on. That’s happening right now with the new “News on Tubi” live stream feature, for example: It’s only currently available on Android, Roku, and Amazon Fire devices, but it will be available on all Tubi devices eventually.
Tubi Value
In my book, an experience this good with a $0 price tag is a great value. What more can I say? As much as I would like to get some content from the last three to four years, Tubi more than met my expectations for a free service. There is no paid ad-free option, which is something to keep in mind if the ads are a dealbreaker for you. Barring that, I think you’ll agree that this service offers a pretty great value given its non-existent price tag.
Tubi Review: My Verdict
I judge a free service by whether they waste my time and whether they offer more annoyance than value. Tubi isn’t perfect. I would like a few more ways of browsing the titles, and I would love some newer (and preferably full HD) content.
But, overall, I’m really happy with what I found. Tubi won’t become my main streaming service anytime soon, but that’s the beauty of the free price tag — I can keep this service around without adding to my expenses. Given my experience with Tubi, this was a no-brainer: Tubi’s app has earned a permanent spot on my streaming devices.
OK. I expected ads from a free service. The movie selection is good and I found movie choices superior to the options I have from Netflix. But, how many times can I watch the same commercial! 2 out of 5 times it is the stupid Toyota SUV commercial. I mute it every time, I don’t know how much money Toyota paid. Dear Toyota and TubiTV, I don’t even remember what you are selling. I found the repetition so annoying that I ignore it time and again.
Thanks for all the reviews. 33% commercials are too much for me. The only thing worse is pro sports like NFL commercials that sometimes reach 44%. I stopped watching the Bears after 40 years of fandom so I will now cancel my trial with Tubi. Corporate greed is destroying democracy and destroying common sense on how many ads can you show and still be productive.
We are now so overloaded on advertising that I shut it out and rarely turn any programs on that will invade my home to sell me junk I do not need or want.
the service is free, so i am not sure what your trial period means…. just because a commercial comes on, does not mean you have to buy something. I tune it out, run in the other room, let the dog out, grab a drink from the fridge, etc. I love the movie selection.
I have not been able to watch anything without it stalling or freezing. Wont and don’t recommend
Tubi TV needs to charge and stop the ads… Their content is good and the crazy amount of commercials ruin it all…
The only problem I encountered with Tubi TV was when there were ads. Occasionally it would restart the movie so I had to manually place it back where the movie left off. Other than that Tubi TV is definitely something I will be using a lot.
Love tubi tv, very smart app, low volume when commercials are playing and great choice of movies and it’s free .
It is all a fake thing. After you watch it a while, they double the commercials and stop keeping the volume low. They suck you in then screw you over just like regular TV. Nothing new here.
Pretty lame service with the commercials restarting back at “1 of 2” about ten times if you hit the left or right button to skip forward or back a few seconds. Why can’t they just do it the way Hulu did it back before Netflix was even online, back in 2010. Show a two-minute commercial prior to the movie or TV show or give option to have several 20-second interruptions.
Like it, but way, way too many ads in between movie. Very distracting!!!
Tubi TV is an ok service. I think I’d be willing to pay for it (under $10 a month) just to avoid the commercials… and why are they the same commercials over and over… makes me not want to buy the product. Not very smart marketing.
Never could get the movie to play past the beginning credits. Crashed 3 times. Back to Netflix.
Yep, too many commercials for me also. And to make matters worse it’s the same commercial over and over and over and over… Bye bye Tubi.
Dude its free!!! Whats wrong with you people? Commercials are paying for the free movies, come on dammit.
Seems pretty good so far, apart from the fact that the subtitles on the German film I watched were a) 50% absent and b) absolutely tiny. Good is I’m trying to improve my Germans skills! Other than that, not bad for a free service.
Tubi is garbage. The head of the company says 5 mins of commercials every 30 mins, try 5 mins of commercials every 10 mins. That’s 12 times every 2 hour movie, and there should be only 4 by what they said! So screw these liers! I would rather pay for Netflix, fiber optic high speed internet, satellite, high definition TV, and PlayStation Vue/Xbox Live!
What the hey! I started watching TubiTV this week and only seen 1 ad while watching my first movie then the next day maybe 2 ads tops. Today 5 before the movie started, 2 minutes later 3, 2 minutes 4! If that happens tomorrow I’m gone!
Watched one movie so far, 2 minutes of ads in the beginning and then a 30-second ad every 30 minutes. It was an older movie, I imagine newer movies will have more ads. No buffering issues with my Fire Stick.
Really like Tubi! Yes there’s commercials, yes they’re repetitive (sometimes 5 of the same ad in a row). But otherwise it’s free, so I’m happy to deal with the commercials. Gives me a minute to stand up, stretch, run to the kitchen or bathroom. Cable TV charges a monthly fee and there’s ads. I remember when having cable meant no ads. Good selection of movies. Works just fine with my Roku 3. No buffering or anything else (let me not be jinxing myself).
Great shows and movies, commercials are very short and entertaining. In the beginning the commercials would load very loud. Perhaps someone complained to the FCC about the volume of the commercials because as of late they been on a normal if not lower volume than the program you’re watching. It’s way better thank Crackle which loads the same one commercial at extremely loud volume, and doesn’t load correctly on Roku 3.
Tubi TV and Crackle have way too many ads! They need to take a lesson from the free Roku Channel which has ads that you hardly notice. One ad at a time and very very short!
I’m not clear on when you get to watch C free and when you have to watch with commercials. Which, by the way, ARE TOTALLY ANNOYING WHEN THEY SHOW THE SAME ONE OVER AND OVER AND OVER AND OVER… What are they thinking? Maybe one day we will have to CHOOSE the commercials we have to watch to keep watching our shows.
The number of commercials must depend on what you are watching. I’ve watched a couple of older Australian TV shows on Tubi (City Homicide & Packed to the Rafters) and they had very few ads, sometimes only a couple at the beginning of the episode and none during. Tubi only had the first 3 seasons of Packed to the Rafters so now I’m watching the rest on a free trial of Hulu (supposedly with limited commercials) and the number of ads is completely ridiculous for a paid service. There are several mostly older British/Australian shows on Hulu I’d like to watch but with the amount of commercials so far, I’d rather stick with Tubi or buy DVDs.
I agree with you
Finally a great reason to CANCEL Netflix! I could care less about commercials, if I don’t have to pay that’s fine by me. I was blown away by the extensive content. My biggest complaint about Netflix is they divide half their content up into discs and streaming, so you have to pay twice to get the entire library. Rip off. And we all know how often they add new content to the streaming part. like… NEVER! I mean I could literally sign back on to Netflix (not that I will again) in 5 years and it will have the same movies streaming as it does now. Bye Bye Netsux!
Hmmm. Seems my Tubi experience is a little different than the bulk of the reviewers. I’ve now watched a couple short films, and three regular length movies (1.5 hours +/- a bit). I’ve seen a total of one 15 second commercial for coke (“Nailed it!”) about twice per hour of watching. That’s it. Perhaps living in Canada gives me some advantage if the ads are doled out regionally…
Interface on my iPhone was OK. Not so great on the website. There’s no real sense of a home space – you are dumped into your “queue” or your “continue watching” space, which includes every movie you’ve watched up until the closing credits! There are also so many movies in my continue watching page because just clicking on a movie to see what its about seems to start it playing. Then you have to manually remove the movie from your history to get rid of it. They definitely need to work on their online interface. You expect this limited interface control on a mobile device, but not on the website.
I live in the country, with a slower streaming service. Don’t know how Netflix achieves it, but its handling of streaming limitations is superior to Tubi (which is to be expected). I had movies stall quite often on the website location. Or the sound would continue but the picture would freeze. I also tried watching a movie across several platforms. It would sync to the correct place in the movie only about half the time. Oh, another pet peeve: on the mobile service the captions default to “on” for some reason – and will turn themselves on after each commercial, or after each time you pause or stop watching and then go back to the show for any reason. That got kind of annoying.
All in all I thought the service is adequate for the price, but could certainly benefit from improvements. Not a Netflix replacer, but as a free service it certainly complements the paid streaming subscription services.
Most of Tubi’s movies are just plain bad…The only feature l enjoyed was “SHACKLETONS CAPTAIN” ,a documentary based movie that was really good and well done…The good thing is that Tubi is free but most of the movies are the ones nobody else will feature. They are sub rate with unknown cast members…l’ve started to watch many movies only to delete after only 10 minutes of viewing because they are just so lame…With that said l don’t find Netflix much better… I’m a movie buff but get fatigued scrolling through movie after movie trying to find quality entertainment…Sometimes l have to wonder how these movies ever get financing in the first place…
How do I stop auto play where another movie starts automatically after I’m finished watching a movie. I am getting tired of seeing the same movie over and over again after I’m finished watching a movie I’ve chosen.
I finally cut the cable cord earlier this year. We have a smart tv, and subscriptions with Hulu+, Amazon and Netflix, but i LOVE TUBI. There are so many movies that I like, many classic hollywood, golden age era movies. Some lesser known but i have enjoyed. I have not watched any shows, so only have the movie experience. I don’t find the commercials troublesome at all. .. Hey this is free stuff, and to me, a lot of choices on movies that i like. I always have a huge que of things to watch next.
Choices of movies area ok. Some top box office, mostly B movies I’m never going to be interested in. Commercials are unpredictable with occasionally only one, most times two or three and even I’ve experienced several minutes of breaks. Constantly fighting jumps of up to two minutes of lost movie time where I have to stop and set the movie back. Almost doesn’t seem worth the hassles free brings when you’re constantly fighting with jumps in play and the long commercials.