

If you have everything on the list and really want 4K Netflix, the process of running Windows on Mac is fairly simple. You’ll also need Edge, but it’s included in Windows 10. A copy of Windows 10 and the willingness to either dual-boot your system or run it in a virtual machine.This is the only plan with 4K support, but you will also be able to have four simultaneous streams from the same account. A Netflix “Premium” account, which costs $15.99 per month.
Netflix for mac software software#
And even if you could use software decoding, you might run into performance issues depending on your model. Safari does support software decoded HEVC on older CPUs, but since it doesn’t support HDCP 2.2, we’re stuck on Windows, using Edge. Edge only supports hardware decoded HEVC, but since it’s the only browser on Windows even supporting it at all, we have to use it. Only Kaby Lake or higher CPUs have specialized hardware for decoding HEVC much faster.
Netflix for mac software 1080p#
You won’t see any benefits streaming 4K content on a 1080p TV or your Mac’s 1440p display since it’s more pixels than can be displayed.

You can still watch 4K Netflix content on your Mac, but it won’t be easy, and it certainly won’t be a good solution.

And the kicker is that DRM doesn’t even really work since shows will be pirated regardless (often automatically within minutes of release), so all it does-especially in Netflix’s case-is harm consumers. HDCP is an OS level compliance and can’t be fixed with a fancier browser, so you’ll need Windows (or a virtual machine running Windows) to watch Netflix, all to ensure you’re not recording any shows. But another issue arises with DRM, a way of protecting the show from being copied and pirated. The DRM Netflix uses for 4K content is the new HDCP 2.2 (High-bandwidth Digital Content Protection), which macOS does not support as of Mojave.
