
Picture Credits: Universal Pictures
In 2026, Universal Pictures movies began hitting Netflix in the US much sooner than normal, thanks to an accelerated deal that sees the first window shared between Peacock and Netflix (previously Prime Video). Following a major shift in strategy from the studio, new Universal theatrical releases (both live-action and animated) will be given longer exclusive runs in cinemas—meaning a longer wait before they eventually make their way to your Netflix queue.
According to a new report published today by The New York Times, Universal is officially ditching its pandemic-era policy of guaranteeing only three weekends (about 17 days) of theatrical exclusivity. Effective immediately, the studio will guarantee a minimum of five weekends for its new movies. Starting in January 2027, the minimum will expand to seven weekends (roughly 45 days).
The reasons why are readily clear to anyone who tracks the film industry. The box office remains in recovery mode, with annual ticket sales in the US and Canada trailing pre-pandemic levels by roughly 22%. While the collapsed windows served a purpose during COVID, they’ve also come with some lingering impacts. Hollywood studios are realizing that sending movies to premium video-on-demand (PVOD) and streaming services too quickly has trained consumers to just wait it out at home, treating streaming films as “free.”
“Our windowing strategy has always been designed to evolve with the marketplace, but we firmly believe in the primacy of theatrical exclusivity and working closely with our exhibition partners to support a healthy, sustainable theatrical ecosystem,” Donna Langley, chairwoman of NBCUniversal Entertainment, told the Times.
How Does This Impact Netflix US Subscribers?
As we covered earlier this year, Universal’s live-action Pay-1 window deal with Netflix kicked off a full year early in January 2026, transitioning away from Prime Video. Netflix already had a long-standing parallel deal for Universal’s animated features from Illumination and DreamWorks.
Under the current arrangement, the release timeline for Universal movies looks (roughly) like this:
- Theaters
- PVOD (Previously as short as 17 days)
- Peacock (after ~100 days, a 4-month exclusive window)
- Netflix (10-month window)
- Peacock (Returns for a final 4 months)
Because the first window (theaters) is expanding, our understanding is that the clock for when a movie heads to Peacock—and subsequently to Netflix—is pushed back.
How This Shifts the Timeline for Netflix Subscribers
Because the theatrical window acts as the “starting gun” for the entire pipeline, pushing it back creates a ripple effect that delays every subsequent stage.
| Stage | Previously (Mid-Tier / Underperforming Films) | Previously (Major Blockbusters) | The New Standard (All Universal Titles Starting Jan 2027) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Theatrical Exclusivity | 17-30 Days | 30-35+ Days | 45 Days Minimum |
| Peacock (First Window) | ~1.5-3 Months post-release | ~4 Months post-release | ~4+ Months post-release |
| Arrival on Netflix | ~5.5-7 Months post-release | ~8 Months post-release | ~8-9+ Months post-release |
If you prefer to watch the latest Universal blockbusters on Netflix rather than in a cinema or on Peacock, you will need to settle in for a longer wait. The only exception to this new, slower pipeline remains Focus Features, which will maintain its faster 17-day theatrical window for specialty titles.
The first film this new policy applies to is Reminders of Him, due out on March 13th. Previously, this film would’ve been expected to go to Peacock by June and Netflix by October. Under the new timeline, subscribers likely won’t see it on Peacock until late June or July, pushing its Netflix arrival to late October or November.
Looking ahead to other massive theatrical releases slated for later this year and into 2027—such as Minions & Monsters, The Super Mario Galaxy Movie, The Odyssey, and Violent Night 2—you can expect them to have plenty of time to perform at the box office before their Peacock and Netflix streaming clocks begin.
Are you willing to wait a little longer to watch the latest Universal blockbusters on Netflix, or will this push you back into movie theaters? Let us know in the comments below!

