6 Best Nollywood Movies on Netflix in 2026 (Ranked)

Nollywood is having its strongest streaming era yet. Nigerian cinema now breaks box-office records at home and lands global Netflix charts abroad — and 2026’s slate proves the industry can do epic fantasy, political thriller and laugh-out-loud comedy in the same breath. If you’re wondering what to watch tonight, start here.
1. Behind the Scenes
The one everyone is talking about — and the numbers back it up. Behind the Scenes reportedly grossed over ₦2.7 billion, making it the highest-grossing Nollywood film of all time.
It follows Aderonke “Ronky-feller” Faniran, a wealthy and endlessly generous real-estate mogul who pours into everyone around her without ever asking for anything back.

What begins as a portrait of generosity slowly turns into a study of what people do with kindness.
Big performances, bigger heart.
2. Aníkúlápó: Rise of the Spectre
Kunle Afolayan’s Yoruba epic universe keeps growing. After the record-breaking original film and series, Rise of the Spectre continues Saro’s journey, but this time the stakes have moved beyond the mortal realm.

Lavish production design, folklore taken seriously, and a reminder that African fantasy doesn’t need to borrow anyone else’s mythology. If you loved the original, the sequel is essential viewing.
3. King of Boys
Kemi Adetiba’s King of Boys franchise is the Godfather of Nigerian cinema, and Eniola Salami remains one of the most magnetic characters Nollywood has ever produced. In the latest chapter, her political empire begins to crumble from within, setting up her most dangerous stand yet.

Power, corruption, and a career-defining lead performance — start from the first film if you’re new, and thank us later.
4. Omo Ghetto: The Saga
The comedy that refuses to age. Twin sisters separated at birth grow up in opposite worlds — Lefty is street-smart and shaped by Lagos hustle culture, while Ayomide is posh and far removed from survival mode.

When their lives collide, chaos follows. Funke Akindele’s energy alone is worth the stream, and it remains one of the most rewatched Nigerian comedies on the platform.
5. Everything Is New Again
Nollywood does romance constantly; it rarely does romance like this.
Produced by Inkblot Productions, Everything Is New Again skips the youthful tropes and follows two protagonists who reunite later in life to weigh lost time against second chances.

Tender, mature and quietly devastating — the film for a slow Sunday evening.
6. Sisi London
Pure, unapologetic comedy. Philo, a sharp-tongued and no-nonsense wife, goes to war with Cecilia, a flashy “London” returnee whose fake accent is only the start of her drama, especially once Cecilia decides she wants Philo’s wealthy husband for herself. Loud, chaotic and endlessly quotable.

Why Nollywood’s Netflix era matters
Streaming has changed who gets to watch Nigerian stories. A film that once played only in Lagos cinemas now premieres simultaneously in London, Houston and Nairobi living rooms. That global audience is pushing budgets up, raising production standards, and proving that African stories travel without translation.

The 2026 slate — from a ₦2.7 billion box-office record to prestige epics — is the strongest argument yet that Nollywood isn’t “rising” anymore. It has arrived.
Seen something we missed? Tell us your 2026 Nollywood favourite on our socials @culturegossip — and check our guide to Nollywood’s history for how the industry got here.
