| Feature | Description |
|---------|-------------|
| Multi-threading | Tests many accounts simultaneously for speed |
| Proxy support | Uses HTTP/SOCKS proxies to avoid IP blocking |
| Captcha handling | Some advanced versions integrate 2Captcha, Anti-Captcha |
| Plan detection | Checks if account is Basic, Standard, Premium, or UHD |
| Profile check | Detects if account has PIN or profile lock |
| Expiry check | Shows remaining days of subscription |
| Country detection | Identifies account's region (e.g., US, UK, BR) |
| Output formats | Saves working accounts as hits.txt or valid.txt |
Marcus stared at his laptop screen, the blue glow reflecting off his glasses. It was 2:47 AM, and his bank account showed $11.23.
"No way I'm paying $15.49 for Netflix this month," he muttered.
His roommate Jake walked in, holding a cup of instant noodles. "Still broke?"
"Always broke."
Jake leaned over and glanced at the screen. "Why don't you just use one of those checkers from GitHub?"
Marcus frowned. "What do you mean?"
"There are repos — tools people upload. You feed in a list of email and password combos, and it checks which ones work on Netflix. Free accounts, basically."
"That's... isn't that illegal?"
Jake shrugged. "It's just checking. You're not stealing anything. People post these tools openly. It's not like you're hacking into their servers."
Marcus wasn't convinced, but the desperation crept in. Midterms were next week. He needed something to decompress with. A movie. A show. Anything.
"Just show me," he said quietly.
Even if a repository says “for educational use only,” actively using it on Netflix is illegal. Netflix Account Checker Github
Netflix-Checker/
├── checker.py # Main script
├── requirements.txt # Requests, threading, colorama, etc.
├── config.json # Proxy settings, thread count, timeout
├── combos.txt # Input credentials
├── proxies.txt # Proxy list (HTTP/SOCKS5)
├── valid.txt # Output: working accounts
├── invalid.txt # Output: failed attempts
├── README.md # "Educational purposes only"
└── captcha_solver.py # Optional integration
If you are a developer or cybersecurity student, you might be interested in the mechanics of account checkers without the illegal intent. There are legitimate, ethical applications for similar technology:
A quick search on GitHub yields dozens of repositories with names like Netflix-Checker-V2, NF-AccountGen, or SilverBullet. At first glance, they look legitimate. Many include professional README files, instructions, and even shiny badges. But scratch the surface, and you’ll find:
If you want Netflix without paying full price:
A Netflix Account Checker is a script or tool that tests a list of email:password (or username:password) combinations against Netflix’s authentication servers to see if they are valid (active, not locked, and can stream). The Checker 2
These tools are almost exclusively used for credential stuffing — automated login attempts using leaked or stolen credentials.