Netflix prices vary greatly from country to country... and Turkey is often one of the most affordable regions. Before attempting to "pay less for Netflix" by artificially changing your location, it's important to understand:
- How much does Netflix really cost in Turkey?
- why these prices exist,
- what often gets in the way (VPNs, payment methods, terms of use),
- and, above all, what legal solutions can be used to reduce the bill without risk.
⚠️ Netflix prices change regularly and may include local taxes. The amounts below are for reference only; the exact price depends on what Netflix displays at the time of subscription.
1) Netflix prices in Turkey: rates (in TRY) and what they mean
1.1. Monthly rates in Turkey (benchmarks)
After an increase announced in 2025, several sources report prices around:
- Basic: $189.99 per month
- Standard: 289.99 TRY/month
- Premium: 379.99 TRY/month
These amounts are expressed in Turkish lira (TRY). Depending on the exchange rate, conversion into euros may give the impression of a "bargain price," but this varies with the currency.
1.2. Why is Netflix often cheaper in Turkey?
Netflix adjusts its prices based on:
- local purchasing power,
- competition,
- taxes and distribution costs,
- and currency effects.
This mechanism explains why Netflix prices in Turkey may seem much lower than those in Western Europe.
2) Can you "get Netflix Turkey" from France to pay less?
This is where many articles veer into "tips." Let's keep things clear and clean.
2.1. VPNs: Netflix (often) detects them and may block them.
Netflix explicitly displays errors when it detects a VPN or proxy, and recommends disabling the VPN to regain normal access.
In practice, this can cause:
- error messages,
- a catalog that does not match what was expected,
- or failed subscription/payment processes.
2.2. Payment methods: a frequent sticking point
Even when the price in Turkey is attractive, many users report payment refusals or rule changes over time (cards, neobanks, etc.). There are lots of reviews, but this is not a reliable basis for "promising" that it will work in the long term.
2.3. The real risk: an unstable strategy (and rarely profitable in the long term)
Taking advantage of location to get a "cheaper Netflix country" often means:
- wasted time,
- payment failures,
- accounts to be recreated,
- a degraded experience (VPN, errors, limitations).
Even Sharesub (a competitor) explains that Netflix is actively fighting VPNs and that "taking a chance" can lead to disappointment.
3) Legal alternatives to pay less for Netflix (without "country tricks")
The goal is simple: reduce costs without relying on a fragile arrangement.
3.1. Choosing the right plan (and adapting it to actual usage)
Before focusing on a Netflix Turkey price, two questions suffice:
- How many screens are actually used?
- Are 4K/HDR and multiple downloads essential?
Very often, households pay too much for their usage.
3.2. Share properly: household + "extra member" depending on available options
Netflix has formalized sharing options through the concepts of household/extra member in certain countries and offers (Standard/Premium). Depending on the region, Netflix also specifies certain restrictions (for example, activation in the same country as the account holder for certain mechanisms).
👉 Moral of the story: "clean" sharing is possible, but only within the options offered by Netflix.
4) The simplest lever: co-subscription
The point of the topic isn't currency geopolitics: Netflix is expensive, especially when you add up Netflix + Disney+ + Spotify + Prime, etc.
Rather than relying on an uncertain change of country, a sustainable approach is to spread the cost of a multi-profile subscription (when compatible with the offer) through co-subscription.
How does it work in practice?
The principle is simple:
- A person with a subscription that includes multiple spaces (depending on the plan) offers an unused space.
- Other people join in and pay their share.
- A platform such as Spliiit facilitates networking and payment management, instead of having to manage everything manually (transfers, reminders, oversights, etc.).
✅ Result: lower bills, without having to rely on a "cheaper Netflix country" or technical workarounds.
👉 Discover Spliiit and the concept of co-subscription: https://www.spliiit.com/
5) FAQ — Netflix Turkey pricing
Is Netflix really the cheapest in Turkey?
Turkey is often cited as one of the most affordable countries, but it is not always "the cheapest" depending on the time of year, taxes, and exchange rates.
Is it legal to use a VPN to pay less for Netflix in another country?
Using a VPN is not illegal in itself, but Netflix may restrict access and display errors when access is via a VPN/proxy.
Why does Netflix sometimes display prices in euros on the Turkey page?
Netflix sometimes adapts the display according to the language/country detected and the browsing context. The reliable point is always the price displayed in your account's subscription process at the time of payment (and the rules may change).
What is the best way to pay less for Netflix without any hassle?
In most cases:
- adjust its formula to its actual use,
- share within the scope of the options offered,
- and use co-subscription to split the bill easily (e.g., via Spliiit).
Key points to remember
- Netflix prices in Turkey are often lower (prices in TRY), but conditions and amounts are subject to change.
- "Change country" setups are unstable (VPN detected, payment refused, rules that change).
- The simplest long-term approach: tailored plan + supervised sharing, then distribution via co-subscription.
Frequently asked questions
Netflix
12,53
€/month
