Netflix mobile access 79฿ offer
- An X account identified as zr4h0 posted on May 19 advertising Netflix mobile access in Thailand for 79 baht per 30 days. - The post offered “private” mobile-only access at 79 baht, below the 99-baht extra-member fee Netflix describes for out-of-household sharing in many markets. - The post remains viewable on X, while Netflix’s help pages direct out-of-household users to create accounts or use extra-member slots.
An X post from user zr4h0 advertised Netflix mobile access in Thailand for 79 baht for 30 days, according to the post dated May 19. The offer was framed as a “private” mobile-only option rather than a standard subscription sold directly by Netflix. Netflix’s own help pages say users may not share an account outside their household and direct people outside the household either to create their own account or be added as an extra member. The offer sits in a gray market that has persisted alongside Netflix’s formal crackdown on password sharing. Netflix says a “Netflix Household” is the collection of devices connected to the internet at the main place where a subscriber watches Netflix. People outside that household, the company says, need their own account or an extra-member slot where available. ### What exactly was being sold for 79 baht? (x.com) The May 19 X post promoted 79 baht mobile access for 30 days in Thailand and described it as a private account-style arrangement. The wording, as summarized in the source briefing, presented the offer as an alternative for users seeking low-cost mobile viewing rather than a full Netflix plan purchased through Netflix’s own website. (help.netflix.com) The 79-baht figure matters because it undercuts other official price points tied to account sharing. Thai media reports on Netflix’s sharing rules have said the company charges 99 baht per month for an extra member in Thailand, and that the policy was rolled out there in 2023. ### How does that compare with Netflix’s official rules? Netflix’s help center says plainly that users may not share a Netflix account outside their household. (x.com) The company says people who do not live in the household must create their own account or be added as an extra member, and that extra members must be activated in the same country where the account owner created the account. (en.thairath.co.th) Netflix’s Thailand landing page does not advertise a 79-baht mobile-sharing product. The page currently shows general monthly pricing in a range and directs users to sign up through Netflix, not through third-party sellers on social platforms. ### Why do these offers keep appearing? Thailand has been part of Netflix’s account-sharing enforcement for several years. Local coverage in 2023 reported that Netflix began notifying Thai members that accounts were intended for use within the same household, while also introducing paid options for users outside the home. (help.netflix.com) (netflix.com) That policy created an opening for unofficial resellers offering cheaper access, especially for mobile-only users. The X post in this case appears to target exactly that audience: people who want a lower-cost, phone-based way to watch without paying for a full retail plan or an official extra-member arrangement. ### Is this an official Netflix plan? Netflix’s public materials reviewed for this article do not show an official 79-baht “private” mobile access product tied to account sharing in Thailand. (thebeat.asia) The company’s documented options are a direct subscription and, in supported cases, a paid extra-member slot managed by the main account holder. The distinction matters because unofficial sellers may be repackaging access from existing subscriptions rather than selling a plan authorized by Netflix. (x.com) Netflix does not describe third-party social-media resellers as a valid purchase route in the materials reviewed here. ### What should a reader watch next? The next concrete check is the X post itself and Netflix’s Thailand and help-center pages. (netflix.com) As of May 21, the post was cited in the source briefing as live on X, while Netflix’s current guidance continued to point users to household-based access, direct subscriptions, and extra-member accounts where available. (x.com)