Everything That’s Streaming in July 2026, Now With BritBox!
From Big Bang spinoffs to a Harry Dean Stanton celebration, plus Shark Week, Enola Holmes and more
July is here with fireworks in the sky, hot dogs and burgers on the grill, and temperatures climbing. The streaming landscape is heating up, too.
If you don’t want to go outside this month and stick to some indoor entertainment, you’re in luck. This July’s TV calendar has much more than just Shark Week. Will Ferrell is back in Ricky Bobby mode, King of the Hill returns, a new Big Bang Theory spinoff emerges and a cult British TV show starts streaming on the Criterion Channel.
And speaking of British shows: This month marks the debut of BritBox in the Book & Film Globe streaming guide!
Read on for our definitive guide to the top titles this month.
Netflix
Enola Holmes 3 (July 1) — Sherlock Holmes (Henry Cavill) has been kidnapped, and it’s up to Enola (Millie Bobby Brown) to find him. Enola just has to get through her wedding first. This third installment of the franchise also co-stars Louis Partridge, Helena Bonham Carter and Himesh Patel.
Little House on the Prairie (July 9) — Laura Ingalls Wilder’s book series gets a new adaptation, this time with a Netflix budget. Could this be Netflix’s competition for the Taylor Sheridan crowd?
The Hawk (July 16) — Will Ferrell is back doing what he does best: Playing Ricky Bobby. This time, he’s Lonnie Hawkins, 2004’s No. 1 golfer who refuses to retire. With this, Happy Gilmore 2, Stick and The Dink (see the Apple TV section below), it’s a great time for washed-up athletes playing sports with clubs or rackets.
Also playing:
Quarterback (July 14)
Heartstopper Forever (July 17)
Ransom Canyon Season 2 (July 23)
72 Hours (July 24)
Visit Netflix for a full list of releases.
Hulu
King of the Hill Season 15 (July 20) — The Hill family returns for another season of Texas-based observations about life from creator Mike Judge. The season 14 revival was Disney’s biggest adult animated premiere in five years in 2025. The new trailer promises even more Hank hijinks.
They Fight (July 17) — Based on the 2018 documentary of the same name, They Fight is about a coach recently released from prison (André Holland) who coaches a ragtag group of teenage boxers in southeast Washington, D.C. Andre Royo, Wendell Pierce, and Mykelti Williamson co-star.
Furious (July 27) — Emmy Rossum’s back on TV, and it’s a far cry from Fiona Gallagher. Here, she plays an FBI agent investigating a female serial killer.
Also playing:
Snowpiercer Seasons 1-4 (July 22)
Visit Hulu for a full list of releases.
BritBox
Gone (July 23) — In this thriller, a headmaster (David Morrissey) becomes the prime suspect in his wife’s disappearance. Eve Myles plays the lead investigator on the twisty case, which exposes old secrets and highlights new betrayals.
A Woman of Substance (1984) (July 29) — The original 1984 miniseries is streaming on BritBox to coincide with the recently released new adaptation. Both series follow the fictional story of Emma Harte, a Yorkshire maid who rises to become a powerful businesswoman.
Visit BritBox for a full list of releases.
Disney+
X-Men ‘97 Season 2 (July 1) — They’re back! This season picks up immediately after season 1 of the animated series left off, with the X-Men divided in different eras in time trying to navigate home. And back in the 1990s, new forms of mutant intolerance are growing while the X-Men are gone.
Also playing:
Descendants: Wicked Wonderland (July 16 Disney Channel; July 17 Disney+)
Visit Disney+ for a full list of releases.
Apple TV
Lucky (July 15) — Anya Taylor-Joy is Lucky, a con artist on the run after a heist goes wrong. But now she has to embrace her criminal past one final time. The series is an adaptation of Marissa Stapley’s bestselling novel, which was a Reese’s Book Club pick. Reese Witherspoon executive produces, and Annette Bening, Timothy Olyphant and Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor co-star.
The Dink (July 24) — Jake Johnson is Dusty Boyd, a former tennis prodigy who hates pickleball because his dad (Ed Harris) hates pickleball, and Dusty is desperate for his dad’s approval. When an injury sidelines Dusty and forces him to try pickleball for rehab, he finds he actually likes it. This new comedy film from the director of Barb and Star Go To Vista Del Mar also stars Mary Steenburgen, Patton Oswalt, Chloe Fineman, and Andy Roddick as himself.
Also playing:
Silo Season 3 (July 3)
Trying Season 5 (July 8)
Snoopy Presents: There’s No Place Like Home, Snoopy (July 31)
Visit Apple TV+ for a full list of releases.
Prime Video
Elle Season 1 (July 1) — Apparently, law school wasn’t the first time folks underestimated Elle Woods. This new prequel TV series focuses on a high school-aged Elle (Lexi Minetree) in the ‘90s, forced to adapt when her family moves to Seattle. She joins the school paper, uncovers some corruption, and adopts Bruiser.
Ride or Die (July 15) — Debbie (Octavia Spencer) and Judith (Hannah Waddingham) are best friends who know everything about each other. That bond is tested when Judith reveals she’s an international assassin. When a hit goes bad, they’re forced to go on the run with each other in Europe.
Also playing:
Batman: Caped Crusader Season 2 (July 31)
Visit Prime Video for a full list of releases.
HBO Max
Stuart Fails To Save The Universe (July 23) — Credit where credit’s due. Whether you loved or hated The Big Bang Theory, it spawned not one, not two, but three spinoff shows: Young Sheldon, Georgie & Mandy’s First Marriage, and now Stuart Fails To Save The Universe. Here, comic store owner Stuart (Kevin Sussman) must restore reality after he breaks a device built by Sheldon and Leonard, and accidentally causes a “multiverse Armageddon.”
Also playing:
The Man Will Burn (July 9)
Shark Week (Starts July 26)
Visit HBO Max for a full list of releases.
Peacock
The Five Star Weekend (July 9) — This miniseries, based on Elin Hilderbrand’s 2023 novel of the same name, stars Jennifer Garner as a recently widowed food blogger. She invites her best friends at different stages of her life (Regina Hall, Chloë Sevigny, D’Arcy Carden and Gemma Chan) to Nantucket for a weekend to help her cope. Old secrets are revealed, friendships are tested, and Judy Greer even shows up for a 13 Going On 30 reunion.
Visit Peacock for a full list of releases.
Shudder
Faces of Death (July 10) — This 2026 meta re-imagining of the 1978 exploitation film centers on a video platform content moderator who discovers videos of people re-enacting the murders from the original film. Is it real, or just a video?
Sachharine (July 24) — The latest weight-loss craze? Eating ashes. Med student Hana is about to find out the side effects of said craze, the hard way.
Also playing:
Exit 8 (July 17)
Visit Shudder for a full list of releases.
Criterion Channel
Starring Harry Dean Stanton — Cool Hand Luke, Farewell, My Lovely, Escape from New York, Christine, Paris, Texas, Repo Man, The Last Temptation of Christ, Wild at Heart, Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, The Straight Story, Inland Empire, Harry Dean Stanton: Partly Fiction, Lucky, more
Murderous Melodramas — Niagara, Some Came Running, Desert Fury, Bigger Than Life, more
BlackStar Film Festival Presents — The Passion of Remembrance, Restless City, Evolution of a Criminal, A Moving Image, The Burial of Kojo, Test Pattern, Landfall, Faya dayi, Fire Through Dry Grass
Directed by Jonathan Demme — Something Wild, Married to the Mob, The Silence of the Lambs, Rachel Getting Married
The Prisoner: The Complete Series — All 17 episodes of the 1960s British TV series, about a nameless spy who resigns from his job and is swiftly kidnapped and held in a quiet town known as The Village, will stream exclusively on the Criterion Channel this July.
Visit the Criterion Channel for a full list of releases.
Paramount+
The Real Wolf of Wall Street (July 14) — While playing on the audience’s familiarity with Martin Scorsese’s 2013 film about Jordan Belfort, this new documentary promises to give viewers “the story Hollywood couldn’t tell” about the infamous former stockbroker. Don’t know how it could get crazier than those office party scenes, but I’m sure it’ll get some people to watch.
Also playing:
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Season 4 (July 23)
Visit Paramount+ for a full list of releases.



