Here’s Everything Coming to Netflix in June 2026
From a new J.Lo rom-com to the third season of “America’s Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders,” June on Netflix is looking bright.

Reported by Vogue.
Summer is almost here, and Netflix is loading up June with the kind of lineup that makes canceling plans feel like a personality trait. According to Vogue, the platform is dropping everything from legacy sports classics to buzzy new originals — and if your watch list isn't already spiraling, it's about to.
The month kicks off June 1 with a nostalgia bomb: the entire Rocky franchise, all three Karate Kid films, the Creed trilogy, Rudy, and Miracle arrive simultaneously — essentially a full weekend of underdog cinema if you're into that. Wedding-movie girlies also eat well on the same date, with My Best Friend's Wedding, Runaway Bride, The Wedding Planner, Four Weddings and a Funeral, and Muriel's Wedding all landing at once. Coincidence? Absolutely not.
The Originals Worth Clearing Your Schedule For
The real heat is mid-month and beyond. Poor Things — Yorgos Lanthimos's awards-season darling starring Emma Stone — arrives June 7, which means first-timers and rewatchers finally have no excuse. Sweet Magnolias returns for a fifth season on June 11, and Grey's Anatomy Season 22 drops June 6 for anyone still faithfully riding that particular emotional rollercoaster. Then on June 14, the Pharrell Williams documentary Piece by Piece — the one told entirely in LEGO — shows up, because 2026 is apparently whatever we want it to be. June 16 brings the moment the internet has been quietly building toward all year: Season 3 of America's Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders, the docuseries that turned a cheer squad into a full cultural conversation. Avatar fans get The Last Airbender Season 2 on June 25, and Sullivan's Crossing closes out the month on June 30 with its fourth season.
The international slate is equally stacked — Mexico 86, Rosario Tijeras Season 5, Colors of Evil: Black, and Agent Kim Reactivated round out a month that proves Netflix's global content machine hasn't slowed down.
June isn't a slow month — it's a full reset, and the only real question is where you're starting.
Read the original at Vogue.


