Netflix will begin streaming NASA+ programming later this summer, adding live space content including rocket launches, astronaut spacewalks, and real-time views of Earth from the International Space Station. The programming comes from NASA’s free, ad-free streaming service, NASA+, which launched in late 2023 as part of the agency’s broader effort to reach the public with science and mission coverage.
This marks the first time Netflix will carry a live video feed from an external programmer in the U.S. Up to now, the platform’s live offerings have been limited to internally produced or exclusively licensed events. That includes stand-up specials, awards shows, and sports programming like its upcoming WWE partnership.
The NASA+ feed will be integrated into Netflix and included at no additional cost to subscribers. While NASA+ is already available for free via the agency’s website, YouTube, app, and a recent distribution deal with Prime Video, this partnership puts the content in front of Netflix’s global audience of more than 700 million users.
According to NASA+, the goal of the partnership is to make the agency’s science and exploration work more accessible and engaging to the public. Rebecca Sirmons, general manager of NASA+, said the initiative aligns with NASA’s 1958 founding mandate to broadly share the story of space exploration.
This follows a similar Netflix partnership announced earlier this month with France’s TF1. That deal brings live French programming to Netflix, including sports, soaps, and competition shows like The Voice. While NASA+ is more educational than entertainment-focused, the underlying strategy is similar: bring in external live feeds and watch how audiences engage with them.
Additional programming details for the NASA+ integration will be shared closer to launch.
The Take
Netflix is laying the foundation for a new live-streaming experience that looks more like FAST but operates entirely within its ecosystem. The NASA+ partnership may seem small, but it signals a strategic shift. Netflix is now licensing always-on, third-party live content, not just producing or hosting special live events.
This is a format test as much as a content play. Passive, always-on content creates a different kind of user experience. It enables lean-back viewing, drives longer engagement sessions, and surfaces shows viewers might not choose in an on-demand setting. It fills a gap that Netflix’s current model leaves open.
The natural next step is single-IP channels. Think of dedicated streams for Stranger Things, Bridgerton, or Squid Game. These channels could run continuously with episodes, extras, behind-the-scenes content, and promotional tie-ins. That kind of packaging would boost visibility for Netflix’s franchises and increase time spent on the platform.
Even though NASA+ is ad-free, this move could be laying the groundwork for a live, ad-supported tier in the future. Netflix could begin to segment viewing experiences not just by pricing plans but by format and engagement model.
This isn’t just a play for rocket launches. It is Netflix beginning to explore a different way to present content altogether.