Netflix shared accounts 50/120 THB May 24

- X posts on May 24 advertised shared Netflix access in Thailand for 50 baht for seven days and 120 baht for 30 days. - One cited post from the account wborking listed the 50-baht and 120-baht prices, while other sellers also advertised HBO Max access. - Netflix’s help pages say people outside a household must open their own account or be added as an extra member.

X posts on May 24 advertised low-cost shared Netflix access in Thailand, with one cited post offering seven-day access for 50 baht and 30-day access for 120 baht. Other posts promoted HBO Max access and bundle deals, with sellers listing durations and payment instructions in public posts, according to the social-media briefing prepared for this story. The cited Netflix post was attributed to the X account wborking and linked to a May 24 post. Netflix’s own help pages say users may not share an account outside their household and that people who do not live in the household must create their own account or be added as an extra member. ### What exactly was being advertised on May 24? The May 24 posts described access in fixed time blocks rather than full account ownership. The social-media briefing for this story identified a post from wborking offering a seven-day Netflix plan for 50 Thai baht and a 30-day plan for 120 baht, and said other sellers advertised HBO Max and bundle offers on the same day. The pricing structure in the posts suggested sellers were marketing temporary access to existing subscriptions. (help.netflix.com) The briefing said some posts included payment instructions alongside the plan lengths, a format commonly used in resale listings on social platforms. ### Do Netflix’s rules allow that kind of sharing? Netflix says account sharing outside a household is not allowed. The company’s help center says, “You may not share your Netflix account outside of your household,” and defines a Netflix Household as devices connected to the internet at the main place where the account is primarily used. Netflix’s Thai-language help page says the same rule applies in Thailand. That page says people who are not part of the household must create their own account to watch or be added as an extra member, and says extra members must be activated in the same country where the account owner created the account. ### How does Netflix say legitimate sharing is supposed to work? (help.netflix.com) Netflix says extra-member sharing is limited and controlled by the paying account owner. The company’s help page says extra members get their own account, password and profile, and that the account owner manages adding and removing them. Netflix’s pricing and plan page for the United States says only certain plans can add extra members, and that extra members are billed through the account owner rather than through a separate resale arrangement. (help.netflix.com) The company also says extra members do not apply to all plan types or third-party billed accounts. ### Why is Thailand relevant in this case? (help.netflix.com) Thailand has been covered as one of the markets where Netflix expanded its password-sharing restrictions. Reports published in 2023 said Netflix began notifying users in Thailand that accounts were intended for one household and that non-household users would need their own account or an extra-member arrangement. (help.netflix.com) That matters here because the May 24 posts advertised access at prices and durations that do not match Netflix’s stated household and extra-member framework. The posts described short-term access sold in baht, while Netflix’s help pages describe account use through a household or an account-owner-managed extra-member slot. (lifestyleasia.com) ### What can be verified from the cited post itself? The cited URL for the wborking post was included in the source briefing, but the post content was not retrievable through the available web view during reporting. The pricing, date and account attribution in this article therefore come from the provided social-media briefing rather than a directly rendered X page. Netflix’s rules, by contrast, are published on its help pages and were available at the time of reporting. (help.netflix.com) Those pages remained live on May 24 and set out the company’s household-sharing restriction and extra-member option. ### What comes next for anyone tracking these listings? Netflix’s help pages say account owners can review unfamiliar devices, sign out of all devices and update a Netflix Household from a TV connected to the home internet. The cited X post remains the named reference point for the May 24 promotion, and similar listings can be tracked through public seller accounts and Netflix’s help-center enforcement guidance. (help.netflix.com 1) (help.netflix.com 2)

Get your own daily briefing

Scout delivers personalized news, insights, and conversations tailored to your role and industry.

Download on the App Store

Shared from Scout - Be the smartest in the room.