K-content continues to dominate as Netflix’s most-watched non-English offering, and this year’s lineup doubles down with a carefully shaped collection built around five emotional pillars drawn from real life and how people experience stories.
From romance and humor to suspense, emotional intensity and imagination, Netflix Korea’s 2026 titles span series, films and unscripted shows designed to spark discovery and connection.
Love, reimagined
Romance leads the charge in 2026 with stories that aim straight for the heart.
The year kicked off with Can This Love Be Translated?, pairing a multilingual interpreter with a global superstar, and No Tail to Tell, a fiery romance between a nine-tailed fox and a top soccer player.
Fresh takes on love continue to unfold. Boyfriend on Demand envisions a future where romance is just a subscription away through virtual dating simulations, while Our Sticky Love explores the tender chaos of two people unexpectedly sharing a home.
Rom-com energy ramps up with Take Charge of My Heart, centered on a chaebol heir whose artificial heart is running out of power, and Sold Out On You, a gentle yet dreamy story about a grounded farmer and a TV host battling extreme insomnia.
Reality dating also shines. Singles Inferno returns for season five, making history as the first Korean reality series to reach that mark, while Better Late Than Single comes back for season two with even more warmth and charm.
Drawn deeper
This chapter of the slate leans into immersive, soul-stirring storytelling. On the film side, Pavane follows three emotionally guarded individuals who slowly become each other’s light. Possible Love (WT), directed by Lee Chang Dong and starring Jeon Do Yeon, Sul Kyung Gu, Zo In Sung and Cho Yeo Jeong, stands out as one of the year’s most anticipated releases.
Series offerings dig just as deep. Notes from the Last Row tracks a professor consumed by obsession over a brilliant student, while The Scandal unfolds a dangerous game of desire in the Joseon era, where seduction is taboo. Folklore-tinged suspense emerges in Mousetrap, following a withdrawn novelist pursuing a shadowy figure.
Tantara brings together writer Noh Hee Kyung, director Lee Yoon Jung, and stars Song Hye Kyo and Gong Yoo to portray the unforgiving Korean entertainment industry across the 1960s and 1980s. Meanwhile, We Are All Trying Here centers on a resentful man’s uneasy search for inner peace.
Adding global flavor, fan-favorite Culinary Class Wars returns for season three, reinvented as a team-based culinary battle.
High stakes, no brakes
Thrills take center stage with stories engineered to keep viewers locked in. Returning hits raise the bar: Agents of Mystery expands its universe in season two with tougher missions, while survival brain game Devil’s Plan intensifies the competition in season three under producer Jeong Jong Yeon.
The Art of Sarah unravels a captivating enigma one layer at a time, while Teach You a Lesson delivers sharp catharsis as a government bureau fights to protect schools and teachers. Bloodhounds comes back for season two with even heavier punches, and Road (WT), directed by Han Jun-hee, follows a trail of violent cross-border murders.
Laugh easy
When it’s time to unwind, the slate delivers comfort and comedy in equal measure. Husbands in Action pairs a woman’s current and former husbands on a mission to save her, while Mission: Cross 2 returns with amplified action and playful marital chemistry. Undercover Miss Hong rounds out scripted comedy with a nostalgic, ’90s-inspired office setting.
Reality shows keep things light and lively. Ready or Not: Texas reunites producer Na Young-suk and actor Lee Seo-jin for an unscripted U.S. adventure. Jae-seok’s B&B Rules! brings together Yu Jae-seok, Lee Kwang-soo, Byeon Woo-seok, and Ji Ye-eun as they attempt to run a bed-and-breakfast. New series Take a Hike! follows novice hikers through Korea’s snowy mountains, while Kian’s Bizarre B&B returns for Season 2 with its signature offbeat charm.
Beyond the expected
Closing out the slate are stories that challenge convention and expand imagination. The WONDERfools blends comedy and action as ordinary neighbors suddenly gain superpowers and face off against looming threats. If Wishes Could Killbreaks new ground as Netflix’s first Korean young-adult horror series, exploring fear through a fresh generational lens.
Epic visuals define The East Palace, a sweeping tale of a royal curse haunting a palace steeped in mystery. Dead-End Job rounds out the lineup with a chilling story about a man lured into the dangerous world of high-paying part-time work while struggling under crushing debt.