Like sharks, the viewing public must always be moving forward to survive, with life-giving new movies and TV shows always sweeping past our gills. When Netflix released its list of everything coming for the month of June 2026, the equal and opposite reaction is that there’s a pile of things that must inevitably leave the streaming service, too, as licensing deals expire. That also means that time is running out for you to tick them off your watch list before they ride off into the sunset.
The full list of shows and movies leaving the U.S. is below (as far as we’ve been able to compile—it’s kind of a moving target), but I’ve taken the liberty of selecting a few standout titles that you should definitely make time for as soon as possible. Let’s do this.
Brockmire, Seasons 1-4 (June 4)
Hank Azaria shines as a disgraced sports announcer
In this hilarious and cutting satire from 2017 to 2020, Hank Azaria (The Simpsons) is incredible as Jim Brockmire, a once-celebrated MLB play-by-play announcer whose career implodes after he discovers his wife cheated on him, and he has a spectacular on-air meltdown. Brockmire follows Jim as he hits rock bottom before clawing his way back by resorting to calling minor-league games in a small Pennsylvania town. Azaria is hilarious in the show, which was finished after four critically-acclaimed seasons, but his costar Amanda Peet is spectacular as Jim’s hard-drinking love interest, Jules. Filthy, funny, and surprisingly moving, all but one season sit at a 100% on Rotten Tomatoes. Catch it before it’s gone.
The Iron Claw (June 19)
A wrestling dynasty’s stunning, tragic story
The true and dark story of the iconic Von Erich brothers, who were royalty in the world of pro wrestling in the early 1980s, but who suffered tragedy after tragedy. The Texan family revolutionized the wrestling industry, but their legacy was overshadowed by the so-called “Von Erich curse,” which saw all but one of the five wrestling brothers die young. The critically-acclaimed The Iron Claw (89% RT score) tells the story of the brothers, played by Zac Efron, Jeremy Allen White, and Harris Dickinson, and follows their triumphs and hardships under the shadow of their domineering father. It leaves Netflix on June 19.
The Expendables (June 20)
A who’s-who of ’80s action heroes
Rambo himself, Sylvester Stallone, directed and stars in this old-school tribute to the brilliant ’80s action heroes I grew up with, bringing together one of the greatest ensemble casts in history (if you’re a fan of the genre). Who, you ask? The Expendables features the likes of action legends Jason Statham, Jet Li, Dolph Lundgren, Steve Austin, Terry Crews, and Mickey Rourke, and has cameos from Bruce Willis and Arnold Schwarzenegger, too. The story doesn’t really matter, does it? But if you must know, it follows a team of old-school mercenaries hired by clandestine government operatives to carry out impossible missions—they continue on through the franchise’s four movies, which are all leaving Netflix on June 20.
Quiz
Which Netflix hit is this quote from?
Trivia challenge
These lines could belong to almost any show — but only one is right.
Sci-FiDramaHorrorActionMystery
Which show contains the line: “The darkness doesn’t scare me. It never did. It’s the light that lies.”
Correct! This brooding line belongs to Wednesday Addams in Wednesday, perfectly capturing her gothic worldview and distrust of cheerfulness. The show leans heavily into Wednesday’s sardonic philosophy, making lines like this feel entirely at home in her deadpan delivery.
Not quite — this line is from Wednesday. While Dark and Stranger Things both deal heavily with darkness and fear, this particular sentiment belongs to Wednesday Addams, whose entire worldview is built on embracing shadow and suspecting the sunny side of life.
Which show contains the line: “We didn’t travel through time to save the world. We traveled through time because someone had to remember it.”
Correct! This reflective line is from Dark, the German sci-fi thriller that made time travel feel less like adventure and more like a haunting responsibility. Dark is known for its philosophical weight, and its characters often speak about time with grief rather than wonder.
Not quite — this one belongs to Dark, Netflix’s mind-bending German series. Stranger Things uses time and alternate dimensions too, but Dark treats time travel as a tragic burden rather than an exciting power, and that distinction shows in lines like this one.
Which show contains the line: “I didn’t come this far to be someone else’s story. I came to write my own.”
Correct! This defiant declaration is pure Monkey D. Luffy energy from One Piece. Netflix’s live-action adaptation kept the spirit of Eiichiro Oda’s original manga alive, and Luffy’s dream of becoming King of the Pirates fuels lines exactly like this one throughout the series.
Not quite — this line is from One Piece. Squid Game is also about survival and self-determination, but its tone is far bleaker. One Piece thrives on bold, adventurous declarations of freedom, which makes this quote a natural fit for Luffy and his crew chasing the Grand Line.
Which show contains the line: “They don’t come from another world. They come from the part of this one we buried.”
Correct! This line is from K-Pop Demon Hunters, where the mythology ties demonic forces directly to suppressed cultural trauma rather than alien dimensions. The show cleverly roots its supernatural horror in the idea that what humanity represses eventually resurfaces in monstrous form.
Not quite — this is from K-Pop Demon Hunters. It’s easy to guess Stranger Things here since the Upside Down has similar vibes, but K-Pop Demon Hunters distinguishes itself by framing its monsters as manifestations of buried history and cultural wounds rather than extradimensional invaders.
Which show contains the line: “The rules were never meant to protect us. They were meant to protect the people who made them.”
Correct! This line cuts to the heart of Squid Game’s central critique of capitalism and systemic inequality. The show’s entire premise is built on the idea that the powerful design games — and societies — in ways that guarantee their own survival at everyone else’s expense.
Not quite — this one is from Squid Game. One Piece also challenges corrupt authority figures like the World Government, but Squid Game delivers this message with raw, contemporary urgency. The show uses its brutal game format as a direct metaphor for economic systems rigged against the vulnerable.
Which show contains the line: “I’ve seen things in that lab that would make you stop believing in coincidence forever.”
Correct! This line belongs to Stranger Things, where Hawkins National Laboratory serves as the epicenter of government experimentation and supernatural horror. The show repeatedly frames the lab as a place where the boundaries of science and ethics were catastrophically crossed, changing everything for the town of Hawkins.
Not quite — this is from Stranger Things. While Dark also features scientific experiments with devastating consequences, the specific reference to ‘that lab’ points directly to Hawkins Lab, the shadowy government facility that accidentally tore open a gate to the Upside Down in season one.
Which show contains the line: “Smiling is the costume everyone wears before they show you who they really are.”
Correct! Classic Wednesday Addams. This line is from Wednesday, and it captures her signature suspicion of warmth and social performance perfectly. The show is full of her sharp, cynical observations about human behavior, delivered with the same flat affect that made the original character iconic.
Not quite — this is from Wednesday. Squid Game might seem like a strong guess since it’s all about masks and hidden motives, but this particular brand of dry, gothic cynicism belongs squarely to Wednesday Addams. Her entire character arc in the show involves learning — reluctantly — that not every smile hides a monster.
Which show contains the line: “Every stage you survive just means they’ve found a better way to kill you next time.”
Correct! This line is from Squid Game, where the escalating lethality of each game is both the show’s dramatic engine and its darkest joke. Contestants quickly learn that surviving one round is never cause for relief — the next challenge is always designed to be more psychologically and physically devastating.
Not quite — this one is from Squid Game. The show’s genius is in how it turns children’s games into elimination rounds with mounting dread. Stranger Things has its own escalating monster threats, but Squid Game makes the manufactured, deliberate cruelty of each new stage a core part of its social commentary.
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Everything leaving Netflix in June 2026
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Departure Date |
Title |
|---|---|
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June 1 |
30 for 30: Once Brothers (2010) Brulesque (2010) Casino (1995) Cold Copy (2023) Cold Pursuit (2019) Fifty Shades Darker (2017) Fifty Shades Freed (2018) Fifty Shades of Grey (2015) Glory (1989) Letters to Juliet (2010) Masameer: The Movie (2020) Mike and Dave: Need Wedding Dates (2016) Money Monster (2016) Mrs. Doubtfire (1993) Night of the Museum (2006) Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian (2009) Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb (2014) Ray (2004) Same Time, Next Year (1978) Sew Torn (2024) Sniper: Reloaded (2010) Something in the Rain (Limited Series) The Lego Movie (2014) Trolls (2016) Use for My Talent (Season 1) We Are Legends (2019) |
|
June 3 |
Kim’s Convenience (Seasons 1-5) 99 Homes (2014) Chick Fight (2020) Kneecap (2024) Plastic Island (2021) The Girl and the Gun (2019) The Host (2013) The Perfect Mother (Limited Series) The Sunlit Night (2019) |
|
June 4 |
Brockmire (Seasons 1-4) Amazing Grace (Season 1) Dispatches from Elsewhere (Limited Series) |
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June 7 |
A Little Bit of Heaven (2011) Babylon (2022) Blindspot (Seasons 1-5) Church People (2021) Security (2020) Shiva Baby (2021) |
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June 9 |
A Lot Like Love (2005) It Ends With Us (2024) |
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June 10 |
K-19: The Widowmaker (2002) Swelter (2014) TURN: Washington’s Spies (Seasons 1-4) |
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June 12 |
The Fanatic (2019) |
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June 15 |
Let’s Eat (2021) Saucedo (2024) The Christmas Classic (2023) Two for the Money (2005) |
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June 16 |
61st Street (Seasons 1-2) Aquarius (Seasons 1-2) Before I Go To Sleep (2014) Millennials (Season 1) Obara’M (2022) Race (2016) Silver Skates (2023) Unbroken (2014) |
|
Fan Girl (2020) Ingoma (The Song) (2023) Moonhaven (Season 1) Song to Song (2017) The Iceman (2013) The Illusionist (2006) Trespass (2011) |
|
|
June 19 |
The Iron Claw (2023) The Wolf Hour (2019) |
|
June 20 |
The Creator (2023) The Expendables (2010) The Expendables 2 (2012) The Expendables 3 (2014) The Expendables 4 (2023) |
|
June 21 |
Between the Temples (2024) The Forge (2024) Zoey 101 (Seasons 1-2) |
|
June 25 |
Justin Time Go! (Season 1) Kill ‘Em All 2 (2024) |
|
June 30 |
Degrassi: Next Class (Seasons 1-4) Man to Man (Limited Series) Sex and the City (Seasons 1–6) |
- Brand
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Apple
- Operating System
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tvOS
Watch ’em while they last!
All good things come to an end, which is true of many movies and TV shows that come to Netflix. Take advantage of this list and check these out before they’re gone this June. You can also keep tabs on what’s leaving with Netflix’s Last Chance to Watch category. It’s a great resource.
- Subscription with ads
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Yes, $8/month
- Simultaneous streams
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Two or four
- Live TV
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No
- Price
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Starting at $8/month
Stream licensed and original programming with a monthly Netflix subscription.




