Netflix is taking its most popular shows and movies into the real world, and fans will soon be able to step directly into their favorite stories. The company has announced official opening dates for its first two Netflix House venues—a bold expansion of its entertainment empire into immersive, theme-park-style experiences.
Opening Dates and Locations


- Netflix House Philadelphia — Opening November 12, 2025, at King of Prussia Mall
- Netflix House Dallas — Opening December 11, 2025, at Galleria Dallas
Both venues will occupy over 100,000 square feet, transforming former retail megaspaces into experiential hubs dedicated to Netflix’s biggest originals.
What Fans Can Expect
Admission will be free, but visitors can choose from a variety of complimentary and ticketed experiences tied to Netflix’s most beloved properties. According to the company, fans can:
- Snap selfies with characters from popular titles like Wednesday or Queen Charlotte
- Step into an immersive Squid Game-themed room (though hopefully less intense than the original series)
- Watch exclusive screenings of Netflix films, such as KPop Demon Hunters
- Dine at Netflix Bites with themed food and cocktails
- Join friends in interactive adventures, including pirate-themed experiences inspired by One Piece
The concept is designed to blend entertainment, retail, and dining, and may help repurpose abandoned mall spaces into new cultural destinations.
Netflix’s Expansion Beyond Streaming
Netflix House represents Netflix’s latest attempt to expand outside streaming, following ventures like pop-up cafes, short-term exhibitions, and Netflix Bites restaurants. Unlike those limited-time events, these Netflix House venues are permanent spaces, making them a more ambitious experiment in fan engagement.
Tickets and Waitlists
Entry into Netflix House itself will be free, but premium or interactive experiences will require a ticket purchase. Fans can already join the waitlist for tickets to those activities at netflixhouse.com.
Whether the experiment succeeds may depend on whether fans show up in large numbers, but it reflects Netflix’s push to turn its intellectual property into immersive, real-world attractions. For fans of Stranger Things, Squid Game, One Piece, and many more, Netflix House could be the closest thing to living inside a Netflix show.