The service is built around content from Disney's main entertainment studios and film and television library, including
Walt Disney Pictures,
Walt Disney Animation Studios,
Disneynature,
Disneytoon Studios,
Pixar,
Marvel Studios,
Lucasfilm,
National Geographic,
20th Century Studios,
Searchlight Pictures,
Touchstone Pictures,
20th Century Animation, the former
Saban Entertainment,
Blue Sky Studios and
Hollywood Pictures. Bob Iger stated that at launch, Disney+ would focus on family-oriented entertainment (not carrying any content rated
R, or ) and that Hulu would continue to host general entertainment; Hulu also hosts Disney+ as an add-on service. Content intended for mature audiences (R and TV-MA) was later added to the service, including the Disney+ original
The Beatles: Get Back (2021), which includes a
content warning, and the
Marvel series produced for Netflix, all of which are rated TV-MA. With the addition of the Marvel Netflix series in March 2022, revised parental controls were introduced to the service in the United States to allow the more mature content of the series to be added, similarly to the controls that already exist for other regions that have the
Star content hub. On December 6, 2023, Disney launched a content hub for Disney+ similar to that of Star, which contains Hulu content for Disney Bundle subscribers in the United States in beta. including original television series and films from
Disney Channel,
National Geographic and
Freeform, as well as select titles from
20th Television,
20th Television Animation, and
ABC Signature. New releases from 20th Century Studios would not immediately be available on either Disney+ or
Hulu at the start, as the studio had pre-existing output deals with other premium television and streaming providers (including
HBO in the United States until 2022,
Crave in Canada and
Sky in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Italy and Germany).
Captain Marvel,
Dumbo (2019) and
Avengers: Endgame became the first theatrically released Disney films to stream exclusively on Disney+ within the pay-cable window. with season 31 being added on October 2, 2020, season 32 being added on September 29, 2021, and season 33 being added on October 5, 2022, in the United States. Season 34 was added to the service on October 11, 2023. Iger said that Disney+ will eventually host the entire Disney film library, including all of the films that are currently in the "
Disney Vault". However, he stated that the controversial
Song of the South (1946), which has never been released on home video in its entirety in the United States, will never be released on the service.
Walt Disney Animation Studios' 1946 film
Make Mine Music is not available on the service, possibly due to a gunfight scene, making it the only film in the
Disney animated canon not to be included. Despite being available at launch, at least five films
Home Alone,
Home Alone 2: Lost in New York,
Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides,
Ice Age, and
Garfield: A Tail of Two Kittieshad been temporarily removed from the service in the United States. It was initially unclear whether the first six films of the
Star Wars franchise would be available in the United States at the service's launch, as
TBS held streaming rights through 2024 as part of its cable rights to the franchise, but in April 2019, it was announced that the films would be available at launch along with
The Force Awakens and
Rogue One, with
The Last Jedi being added on December 26, 2019,
The Rise of Skywalker being added on
May 4, 2020, and
Solo: A Star Wars Story being added on July 10, 2020. On April 2, 2021, several older
Star Wars were released. In the United States, most of the films from the
Marvel Cinematic Universe were available at launch, with the exception of seven films:
Thor: Ragnarok (added on December 5, 2019),
Black Panther (added on March 4, 2020),
Avengers: Infinity War (added on June 25, 2020) and
Ant-Man and the Wasp (added on August 14, 2020), due to existing licensing deals with Netflix; and
The Incredible Hulk,
Spider-Man: Homecoming, and
Spider-Man: Far From Home, which were initially unavailable because their distribution rights were initially owned by
Universal Pictures (
The Incredible Hulk) and
Sony Pictures through the
Columbia Pictures division (Spider-Man). On June 16, 2023,
The Incredible Hulk was added to Disney+ after the rights to the film reverted to Marvel Studios and Disney from Universal. Some films were modified by Disney: a post-credits scene from
Toy Story 2 was edited out; nudity was eliminated from
Splash by adding digital hair, blurring and cropping certain scenes, although the original uncensored theatrical version was restored to the service in 4K in November 2022; films such as
Adventures in Babysitting,
Free Solo, and
Hamilton are altered to remove profanities;
The Adventures of Bullwhip Griffin (1967) was edited to remove
racial slurs, and the short film ''
Santa's Workshop (1932) was edited to remove a "stereotypical black doll". Some older content, such as films, animated shorts and series, have a content disclaimer on the platform noting the possibility of outdated cultural depictions. Starting in October 2020, a 12-second content disclaimer informing viewers of racially insensitive scenes plays before some older Disney films—including Peter Pan, Dumbo, Swiss Family Robinson, Lady and the Tramp, The Jungle Book, Aladdin (alongside the two direct-to-video sequels), and The Aristocats. Additionally, by January 2021, some of these films were no longer viewable on kids profiles; the titles were still available to view on regular profiles. X-Men: Days of Future Past, which was released by 20th Century Fox on May 23, 2014, contains both nudity and the word "fuck", began airing uncensored in mid-2020. Some series are missing episodes, including Darkwing Duck, The Little Mermaid, The Proud Family, Phineas and Ferb, Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends, The Muppet Show, and The Simpsons
, All episodes featuring Stoney Westmoreland on Andi Mack'' are banned from the service. This comes after Westmoreland had tried to arrange a sexual encounter with a minor in 2018, which led to his conviction. On November 22, 2021, Disney and
WarnerMedia reached a deal to amend the pre-existing deal HBO had with
21st Century Fox to allow Disney+ or Hulu and
HBO Max to share the streaming rights to half of 20th Century Studios' and Searchlight Pictures' 2022 theatrical slate in the United States during the pay-one window, with ''
Ron's Gone Wrong'' being the first film under the deal, becoming available on both Disney+ and HBO Max on December 15, 2021. Disney still has full streaming rights to any 20th Century and Searchlight films produced for Disney+ or Hulu, while the Disney deal with WarnerMedia for streaming 20th Century and Searchlight films on HBO Max ended in 2022, with Disney+ and Hulu assuming the full pay-one rights to films released after 2022.
Original scripted content The service's initial original content goal was planned to include four to five original films and five television shows with budgets from $25–100 million. and its spin-offs
The Book of Boba Fett and
Ahsoka, a seventh season of the animated
The Clone Wars (and a spin-off series titled
The Bad Batch), as well as
Obi-Wan Kenobi,
Andor,
Skeleton Crew,
The Acolyte and
Lando. Original Marvel series include
WandaVision and its spin-offs
Agatha All Along and
VisionQuest,
The Falcon and the Winter Soldier,
Loki,
Hawkeye and its spin-off
Echo,
Moon Knight,
Ms. Marvel,
She-Hulk: Attorney at Law,
Secret Invasion,
Daredevil: Born Again,
Ironheart and
Wonder Man. Animated Marvel series include
What If..?,
I Am Groot, ''
X-Men '97, Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man, Eyes of Wakanda,
and Marvel Zombies''. In January 2019, Disney+ ordered
Diary of a Future President from
CBS Television Studios, its first series from an outside production company. A
television series remake of the film
High Fidelity was initially announced for Disney+, but in April 2019, it was announced that the project had been moved to Hulu, citing concerns from its staff that the positioning of Disney+ as a family-friendly service was at odds with their creative vision for the series.
Love, Victor, a spin-off of the film
Love, Simon, was similarly shifted from Disney+ to Hulu in February 2020. In August 2019, Iger announced that 20th Century Fox properties such as
Home Alone,
Night at the Museum,
Diary of a Wimpy Kid and
Cheaper by the Dozen will be "'reimagined' for 'a new generation'" exclusively for Disney+ by
Fox Family. Most original episodic content is released weekly, as opposed to all at once with the release time initially being 12:01 am. PT on Fridays, which lasted from November 15, 2019, to June 25, 2021. With the premiere of
Loki, which debuted on June 9, 2021, Disney shifted the release schedule for new original series and new seasons of the respective series to Wednesdays. On December 25, 2020,
Soul became the first feature-length film from Pixar to be released as a Disney+ original. The following two Pixar films,
Luca and
Turning Red, were also released as Disney+ originals. On February 1, 2022, Disney announced that
Star Original Korean drama series
Snowdrop would be released on Disney+ in the U.S. on February 9, 2022, as a Disney+ original; this marks the series becoming the first international content for Disney+ and the first content as both a Disney+ and Star original.
Original unscripted content Disney also plans original factual television content for the service, aiming to "find the ethos of Disney in everyday stories, inspiring hope and sparking the curiosity of audiences of all ages." Some of these series will have ties to Disney properties, including behind-the-scenes documentary miniseries focusing on Disney studios (such as one following the production of
Frozen II), National Geographic also produced
Magic of the Animal Kingdom (a docuseries following the animal caretakers of
Disney's Animal Kingdom and
Epcot's
aquarium) and
The World According to Jeff Goldblum. Disney reached a two-year pact with the documentary studio Supper Club (
Brian McGinn, David Gelb and Jason Sterman, producers of Netflix's ''
Chef's Table) to produce content for the service, including the conservation-themed nature documentary series Earthkeepers
, and Marvel's 616'', a documentary series chronicling the cultural and societal impact of Marvel's characters. Other factual series include
Encore! (a
Kristen Bell-produced series that reunites casts from high school musical productions to reprise their roles) and
Rogue Trip (a travel series featuring
Bob Woodruff and his son Mack) and the reality competition
Shop Class.
Sports On February 26, 2023, Disney+ broadcast live in Japan the solo ice show
Gift, the first
figure skating event to be held at
Tokyo Dome, produced and performed by
two-time Olympic champion
Yuzuru Hanyu. On July 14 the show was released worldwide. In 2023, Disney+ began to be involved in
alternate broadcasts of
ESPN-televised sporting events in the United States, featuring real-time 3D animations of players represented by characters from Disney properties. The first of these were
Big City Greens-themed broadcasts of
NHL games on March 13, 2023, and March 9, 2024, both of which also simulcast with
ESPN+,
Disney Channel, and
Disney XD. In October 2023, Disney+ also simulcast a
Toy Story-themed broadcast of an
NFL game from
London, England, and in 2024 aired an
NBA Christmas Day game featuring Disney characters. In November 2024, it was announced that an
ESPN hub would be added to Disney+ in the United States on December 4; the ESPN hub would include sports broadcasts and original series that are made available to Disney+ and Hulu subscribers, as well as integrate content from
ESPN+ for users subscribed to that service. The ESPN hub would also integrate with ESPN's then-upcoming
over-the-top service upon its launch in August 2025. On April 16, 2024, it was announced that Disney+ in Denmark and Sweden would air live
UEFA Europa League and
UEFA Conference League matches from the 2024–25 to 2026–27 seasons. In May 2025, Disney+ announced an agreement to broadcast
UEFA Women's Champions League matches throughout Europe starting with the 2025–26 season. In August 2025, Disney+ announced an agreement to broadcast
La Liga matches in the United Kingdom and Ireland. On June 26, 2024, with the closedown of the separate
Star+ service,
ESPN Latin America began to be integrated into Disney+ in Latin America and the Caribbean. In November 2025, it was announced that the NBA games would be available to stream on Disney+
Philippines. The 2025 edition of the
KeSPA Cup League of Legends tournament was exclusive to Disney+, initially in just select Asia-Pacific regions. Prior to the tournament's playoffs, the tournament became available on Disney+ in the United States.
Simultaneous releases Premier Access During the
COVID-19 pandemic with movie theaters closed or heavily restricted around the world, Disney took the decision to offer certain movies via the Disney+ platform for an extra fee. Branded "Premier Access", an additional fee was charged over the regular subscription. This allowed unlimited views of the film as long as the customer maintained a Disney+ subscription. The films became available to all subscribers after approximately three months. The additional fee per movie was $29.99 in the US, £19.99 in the UK, and €21.99 in the rest of Europe. The live-action adaptation of
Mulan was the first to premiere in select countries on Disney+ with Premier Access on September 4, 2020. A second feature film,
Raya and the Last Dragon, was offered through the Premier Access model on March 5, 2021, the same day as its theatrical release,. In March 2021, Disney announced that
Cruella and
Black Widow would be released theatrically and through Premier Access. In May 2021, Disney announced that
Jungle Cruise would also be released theatrically and through Premier Access. This proved to be the final release under this model as the post-COVID world reopened.
Network releases In September 2021, it was reported that Disney had begun a new television release strategy by giving episodes from certain series an early premiere on Disney+ ahead of their television debuts. The first series to be released through this strategy was
The Ghost and Molly McGee, with episodes 3 to 5 being released on Disney+ on October 6, 2021. This was followed by the third and final season of
Fancy Nancy premiering in its entirety on Disney+ alongside its premiere episode on
Disney Junior on November 12, 2021. In November 2021, it was reported that the
Disney Channel Original Movie,
Christmas...Again?! would be released on Disney+ on December 3, 2021, the same day of its television premiere, marking the first film to receive a simultaneous release. A similar approach would be taken with future Disney Channel Original Movies, becoming available on Disney+ the day following their premieres on Disney Channel with movies like
Prom Pact and
The Naughty Nine. This ultimately lead to Disney Channel Original Movies being rebranded to "Disney Original Movies".
Third-party content In addition to Disney's own content, select television programs produced by third-party companies but broadcast on Disney-owned television channels are also featured, such as Ludo Studio's
Bluey, supplied though
BBC Studios. Content co-produced with Disney's European subsidiaries, such as Zagtoon's
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir and
Ghostforce, Hasbro Entertainment's
Kiya & the Kimoja Heroes and
PJ Masks;
Banijay Kids & Family's
The Unstoppable Yellow Yeti and Samka Studios'
Vikingskool are also available on Disney+ in several territories worldwide. On February 7, 2024, Disney+ obtained the streaming rights to the 2023 concert film
Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour, for which they will stream an exclusive unabridged edit of the film dubbed "
Taylor's Version," with songs not featured in the theatrical and VOD releases, beginning March 15. As a result of the Hulu acquisition, select titles from
DreamWorks Animation and
Warner Bros. Discovery, who have a partial deal with Hulu, have also begun to appear on the service, including the 2004 comedy film
Shark Tale and the series
The Croods: Family Tree, as well as the
Cartoon Network series
The Amazing World of Gumball and its continuation series,
The Wonderfully Weird World of Gumball. In Latin America, Disney+ carries a large amount of films and TV series from
NBCUniversal such as
Chucky and
Paramount Global as a result of its merger with
Star+ which previously carried this content on their platform. Outside the US, the
Twilight films were made available to stream on Disney+ under the Star hub including Australia, New Zealand, Canada, United Kingdom, and other regions, supposedly done via a small content deal with
Lionsgate in May 2024. They were later removed from the platform in November 2024. In select regions such as Australia, New Zealand, Germany and more,
The Rookie is available to stream on Disney+ via the Star content hub. The series was formally produced by
ABC Signature and
EOne and is currently produced by
20th Television and
Lionsgate Television, with Disney holding US distribution rights to the series and its spin-offs and Hasbro's EOne, now Lionsgate handling international distribution rights the series and its spin-offs as a result of its acquisition of EOne and merging Entertainment One into Lionsgate Television. This implies that another deal has been done with EOne, now Lionsgate for Disney+. From the start of 2025, a few
Warner Bros. Television shows began appearing on Disney+ outside the U.S. via the
Star hub including
Gilmore Girls,
The Big Bang Theory, and
Young Sheldon, implying that Warner Bros. has done a content deal with Disney. From February 2025, Disney+ began adding a large amount of titles to its
Star Hub outside of the US and Latin America from
Paramount, including some
DreamWorks Pictures titles owned by Paramount. This includes major titles and franchises, such as the first six
Mission: Impossible films,
Mean Girls,
Clueless,
Grease, and
Grease 2 as well as the first six films from the
Transformers franchise. Most of these titles were available until July 31, 2025, excluding
Transformers which was added on July 16, and
Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius which was added on August 1. During July 2025, Disney+ added all seasons of
The Office US from
Universal Television to its
Star content hub outside the US and Latin America.
Multi-year deal with Sony Pictures In April 2021, Disney and
Sony Pictures reached a multi-year deal to let Sony's titles (such as films from the
Spider-Man and
Jumanji franchises, individual tiles like
Stuart Little, While the deal only concerns the United States, titles from Sony Pictures begun to also be added to Disney+ in regions outside of the U.S., as early as June 2022, starting with the majority of the Spider-Man films. This also included the animated
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse. All three
Sam Raimi-directed
Spider-Man films and
The Amazing Spider-Man would eventually be made available on the American version of the platform on April 21, 2023, with
Spider-Man: Homecoming and
Venom, a film in
Sony's Spider-Man Universe, being made available the following month.
Spider-Man: Far From Home was added on November 3, 2023, and
Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse was added to the service on May 1, 2025. In addition to this, mature Sony content was made available internationally via the Star hub such as
Justified,
Ghost Rider,
The Punisher,
The Good Doctor,
Schooled,
Rescue Me,
Future Man,
Damages,
Mr. Mercedes, and
For Life, although most of these were removed from the platform eventually.
European deals In European territories, Disney+ contains several locally produced content to fulfill certain countries' local content criteria. In November 2021, Disney announced that
StudioCanal's
Paddington films would be released on Disney+ in the United Kingdom and Ireland, with the films also arriving on Germany and France eventually. Several other StudioCanal movies such as
Maya the Bee are also available on the service. Films from
Pathé such as
Asterix and Obelix vs. Caesar and
Chicken Run are also available on Disney+ in select European territories.
Hasbro Entertainment's
Peppa Pig is also available on the service in many EMEA regions, first made available in March 2023. On 10 July 2025, The Walt Disney Company and
ITV plc announced that they would agree to share programming on Disney+ and
ITVX, under slots entitled "Taste of ITVX" and "Taste of Disney+". ITV programmes being added to Disney+ would include
Endeavour and
The 1% Club, while Disney programmes being added to ITVX would include
Andor and
Lilo and Stitch: The Series. == Device support and service features ==