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Netflix now requires every user profile to be tied to unique email address

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Why This Matters

Netflix's recent update requires each user profile to be linked to a unique email address, transitioning from shared profiles to individual logins. This change aims to enhance security, personalization, and user management but introduces potential inconvenience for households with multiple users. The move reflects Netflix's shift towards more account security features like two-factor authentication and personalized settings.

Key Takeaways

Recently, my father called me in a panic. There were just a few minutes until Netflix would start streaming a live MMA event, and he couldn’t get into my account. For a while, my father had accessed Netflix as an add-on member with his own profile through my household’s account. On this day, however, he was logged out and couldn’t use my login credentials to watch Netflix. Instead, he saw a prompt asking him to “Add an email address to your profile” in order to continue.

Credit: Scotti_Dev/Reddit/Netflix A Reddit user shared this image of the notification that affected profile owners are seeing. A Reddit user shared this image of the notification that affected profile owners are seeing. Credit: Scotti_Dev/Reddit/Netflix

After some frantic phone troubleshooting and a couple of password resets, we realized that my father had to create his own login to continue using the extra profile that I paid for. Although I was able to get him set up in time (for some disappointing bouts), the situation was confusing and inconvenient.

More users have been encountering this situation as Netflix has gradually required that each profile under a Netflix subscription have a unique email address. When setting this up for my father, I was also asked, but not required, to provide a first and last name.

A Netflix spokesperson confirmed to Ars Technica:

This sign-in update is a permanent change that started rolling out on June 15, 2026.

The change means that every user can now have their own login credentials, which could make it easier for secondary account users to store or change their credentials, log in to a new device, or use two-factor authentication. This setup also enables profile owners to set their language, audio, and display settings without the account holder, Cord Cutters News notes.