What Hulu subscription do I need to watch Fast and Furious?

Fast and Furious

F&F 101: Where to Watch Every 'Fast & Furious' Movie

Two entire decades, nine thrilling films, and countless breathtaking cars and edge-of-your-seat car chases later, it’s no surprise that the Fast and Furious franchise has amassed a loyal fan base.

In the seminal first edition, Paul Walker stars as an undercover L.A. cop who gets caught up in the street-racing underworld (owned by Vin Diesel)...and the rest was summertime cinema history. Here's where you can watch each of the Fast & Furious movies in order.

Where to Stream Every

Here's a breakdown of which streaming services you can find all of the Fast and Furious movies on.

Currently, the Fast and Furious movies are not available on Netflix. However, all of the movies in the Fast and Furious franchise are available on Amazon Prime, YouTube, or Google Play for a cost of $3.99. And better yet, they're free if you have one of the following subscriptions:

  • The Fast and the Furious and 2 Fast 2 Furious are both available on Hulu and HBO Max, for subscribing members.

  • The franchise's third installment, The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift, is currently only available via VOD.

  • Fast & Furious (alternatively known as Fast & Furious 4) and Fast Five are both available on Peacock.

  • Fast & Furious 6 is available via Hulu, Peacock, and also Sling.

  • Furious 7 is available on Hulu and Sling.

  • The Fate of the Furious (F8) is not available for free on any subscriptions. However, you can rent F8 on VOD.

  • F9 is available streaming VOD on Amazon, YouTube or AppleTV.

Keep scrolling below for details on where to stream the Fast and Furious movies.

The Fast and the Furious

2001

http://aple.tmsimg.com/assets/p27779_i_h20_ac.jpg

Icon_Audio-Video_-PlayCreated with Sketch.

Where to watch

Things weren’t always so smooth. Often resembling a music video and dripping with toxic masculinity, these debut entries—the first two in the franchise—feel a bit like a time capsule. But the poor state of VFX technologies do create something remarkable: a unique, almost space-inspired aesthetic. In the countless scenes of underground street racing, drivers hit their NOS-activated boost (that’s nitrous oxide to the uninitiated). When they do, it’s a Star Wars-esque, hyperspeed tunnel: Surroundings blur, colors streak, and their neon-lit cars seem to hover off the ground. For all that’s stale about these older films, the effects are a blast to revisit.

2 Fast 2 Furious

2003

http://aple.tmsimg.com/assets/p32092_i_h20_ab.jpg?w=1920&h=1080

Icon_Audio-Video_-PlayCreated with Sketch.

Where to watch

The sequel that started all the other sequels focuses on Paul Walker's character Brian as he moves from Los Angeles to Miami. His "start over" in a new city quickly looks familiar as he gets involved in the street-racing scene in his new city. Brian must then take down a powerful drug dealer Roman Pearce (played famously by Tyrese). Instead of telling you how 2 Fast 2 Furious ends, societal norms suggest we allow you to see for yourself.

The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift

2006

http://aple.tmsimg.com/assets/p159790_i_h20_ab.jpg

Icon_Audio-Video_-PlayCreated with Sketch.

Where to watch

No actors from the first two Fast films play a key role in Tokyo Drift, and without Paul Walker’s piercing, blue-eyed stare, the absence of sexual tension is tangible. Instead, Lucas Black is the driver in this franchise outlier, and he’s a drawly Southern boy who gets dropped into the world of drifting in Tokyo, Japan.

The movie definitely captures the awe and art of drifting (one moonlit, mountainside sequence is especially breathtaking), but the can’t-miss scene in Tokyo Drift actually takes place in a club. After turning down the unlikely advances of countless women, Black makes his way to a secret door, opening to a body shop in the back of the club. In a delightful redirection of the relentless male gaze, Black begins to ogle, not women but cars. The camera pans sensually across the bodies of bikes and race cars, all to the tune of Juelz Santana’s “There It Go (The Whistle Song).” It’s hilarious, and a welcome change of tone in a movie that doesn’t otherwise play so well today.

Fast & Furious

2009

F&F

Icon_Audio-Video_-PlayCreated with Sketch.

Where to watch

Perhaps true to its name, the series’ fourth entry is quintessential Fast & Furious, and it’s the best place to start. The movie honors its street racing origins throughout, even as its glossy, high-octane identity begins to emerge. Evidence of that? The rollicking cold (no ... hot!) open scene: Dom (Vin Diesel), Letty (Michelle Rodriguez), and the team overtake a gas tanker as it barrels down a steep slope toward a cliff’s edge. Compared to daintier sequences in the earlier films, this heist scene is colossal, contemporary, and immediate. It bellows, “I am blockbuster—hear me roar!”

Fast Five

2011

http://aple.tmsimg.com/assets/p8338313_i_h20_ac.jpg

Icon_Audio-Video_-PlayCreated with Sketch.

Where to watch

The franchise isn’t known for being intimate or realistic, but moments in Fast Five challenge that cliché. Close-ups of worried eyes and tense fingers show us characters in quiet, private moments. And Mia’s (Jordana Brewster) pregnancy announcement generates some genuine emotional urgency. But for all its tenderness, the movie doesn’t abandon adrenaline: The action is grittier and more believable than ever. Varied lengths of shots and intensities of volume create the series’ arguably most impressive sequences. Of all the entries, Fast Five has the most finesse and command.

Fast & Furious 6

2013

http://aple.tmsimg.com/assets/p9573130_i_h20_ab.jpg

Icon_Audio-Video_-PlayCreated with Sketch.

Where to watch

Things take a sharp turn toward absurdity with the series’ sixth entry, and that’s half the fun. Cars nail the landing after bursting through the open nose of a burning, crashing plane. Dom accurately calculates the speed, velocity, and acceleration needed to intercept a falling Letty with his own airborne body. Moments like these might be laughable, but we dare you to look away.

Furious 7

2015

http://aple.tmsimg.com/assets/p10679969_i_h20_ad.jpg

Icon_Audio-Video_-PlayCreated with Sketch.

Where to watch

The sudden death of Paul Walker in 2013—as a passenger in a single-vehicle car crash—stunned the world, but also the filmmakers behind the already-in-progress Furious 7. After a hiatus for mourning and rewrites, the production worked to gracefully retire the character of Brian O’Conner.

It’s sobering to notice the number of long and back-side shots of O’Conner used in the second half of Furious 7. In a majority of these new or previously unfinished scenes, Walker’s two surviving brothers serve as body doubles. And while most close-ups are intentionally blurred by movement during action sequences, we look directly into the eyes of a computer-generated Walker in the final, reverent scene. Walker laughs as he pulls up beside Vin Diesel for one last ride, then splits off at a fork in the road. Paired with the original song “See You Again,” the moment is transcendent, one of the most moving and integrated tributes in movie history.

The Fate of the Furious

2017

http://aple.tmsimg.com/assets/p11730466_i_h20_ab.jpg

Icon_Audio-Video_-PlayCreated with Sketch.

Where to watch

F&F’s eighth film is shockingly dark. Although the Shaw brothers were no small opponents in the sixth and seventh entries, the enemy now is upgraded to mega-villain. Cyberterrorist Cipher (played uncannily by Charlize Theron) is violent, yes. But she’s also the first villain in the franchise to launch plans for world domination. She seduces, she blackmails, and—quite disturbingly—threatens to murder an infant. As Cipher seeks control of global surveillance and technology systems, her motives are deep, existential, and modern. To see the normally light-hearted franchise take on topics so grim is unexpected.

Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw

2019

http://aple.tmsimg.com/assets/p15512904_i_h8_ab.jpg

Icon_Audio-Video_-PlayCreated with Sketch.

Where to watch

But not to worry: We’ve saved the lightest for last. Hobbs & Shaw is a new thing entirely for the franchise—an agile, free, and, above all, funny entry. (This does make perfect sense, as Deadpool 2 director David Leitch steps in.) In the earlier films, Tyrese and Ludacris’ witty banter provided most of the comic relief. But Dwayne Johnson, as Hobbs, and Jason Statham, as Shaw, might steal their crown. Impressive supporting roles are icing on the cake: a returning Helen Mirren as Shaw’s criminal mum; Ryan Reynolds as a CIA agent with a crush on Johnson; and Kevin Hart as the clingy Air Marshal Dinkley.

F9

2021

http://aple.tmsimg.com/assets/p14570977_i_h20_ac.jpg?w=1920&h=1080

The most recent addition to the Fast and Furious franchise forces Dom to confront his past and take down the most skilled assassin slash high-performance driver they've ever seen: Jakob (played by John Cena). Need we say more?

Can you watch fast and furious on Hulu?

The first installment of the Fast & Furious series is available to rent or buy on Amazon here, and on iTunes here. The Fast and the Furious can also be streamed online on HBO Max here and Hulu here.

Can I watch F9 on Hulu?

Watch F9: The Fast Saga Streaming Online | Hulu (Free Trial)

What streaming app can I watch fast and furious?

Download the Peacock app and start streaming The Fast and the Furious. You can watch The Fast and the Furious on Peacock.

What streaming service can I watch Fast and Furious 9?

Fast & Furious 9, an action movie starring Vin Diesel, Michelle Rodriguez, and Jordana Brewster is available to stream now. Watch it on Prime Video or Redbox. on your Roku device.