Netflix Delivery Requirements

Master the technical specs, QC standards, and submission process Netflix requires for independent feature films.

Understanding Netflix's Delivery Standards

Netflix has become one of the largest acquirers of independent feature films globally, but their delivery requirements are rigorous and unforgiving. Miss a specification, and your film will be rejected during QC—forcing you to remaster, resubmit, and delay your launch window. Carbon Arc Media has delivered multiple feature films directly to Netflix, and we understand exactly what the platform requires at every stage.

Netflix doesn't negotiate on quality. Their platform streams to 200+ million subscribers worldwide across every device from 4K televisions to mobile phones. To maintain that consistency, they enforce strict technical standards, metadata requirements, and quality control processes. Understanding these requirements before you begin post-production can save months of remediation work.

Netflix Technical Specifications Overview

Netflix accepts deliverables in two primary formats: Apple ProRes 422 HQ or IMF (Interoperable Master Format). Most independent producers deliver ProRes because it's simpler, faster, and widely supported. IMF is used primarily by larger studios and is technically more flexible but requires specialized software and expertise.

Video Specifications

Codec and Container Requirements

For ProRes delivery, Netflix requires:

Aspect Ratio and Safe Areas

Netflix allows multiple aspect ratios—16:9 (most common), 2.35:1 (cinema scope), 4:3, or even 1:1 for creative content. However, your video file must be letterboxed to 1920x1080 (or 3840x2160 for 4K). The actual image content sits within that frame with black bars, and Netflix strictly monitors the safe area. All essential action and text must remain within the center 1.85:1 area to ensure visibility on all playback devices.

Audio Specifications

Audio Tracks and Metadata

Netflix requires a complete audio package:

Subtitle and Caption Tracks

Netflix requires subtitles in English (if the original audio is English) plus any other languages you plan to deliver. Subtitles must be burned into the video file or delivered as separate SRT files. If delivering separate subtitle files, each language gets its own file with strict formatting rules (no more than two lines per subtitle, 42 characters max per line, proper encoding as UTF-8). Closed captions (for hearing-impaired viewers) are required for the primary audio track in English-speaking territories.

Metadata and Delivery Requirements

File Naming and Organization

Netflix is extremely particular about file naming. Files must follow their naming convention exactly:

[Title]_[Version]_[Type].[ext]

Example: MyFilm_FINAL_ProRes422HQ_Stereo_EN.mov

Deviation from this naming convention—even a single character out of place—will cause the file to fail automated ingestion, and Netflix QC will reject it before even checking video quality.

Metadata Submission

Beyond the video file itself, Netflix requires a detailed metadata package:

Common Netflix Rejection Reasons

The most frequent rejections we see are: (1) Audio loudness outside Netflix's -24 LKFS ±2 spec, requiring complete remix and re-export. (2) Aspect ratio metadata missing or incorrect, causing the platform to display the film incorrectly. (3) Subtitle/caption files with encoding errors or formatting violations. (4) Color space or bit depth mismatched to the delivery resolution. (5) File naming errors. These are all preventable with proper delivery management from the start.

Quality Control (QC) Process

Netflix's Automated and Manual QC

Netflix uses both automated systems and human reviewers. Automated QC scans for technical violations: audio loudness, video codec compliance, frame rate, resolution, file integrity. Manual QC involves Netflix technicians watching the film in its entirety on multiple playback devices, checking for color accuracy, audio sync, subtitle/caption readability, and overall presentation.

If your film fails automated QC, Netflix will send a detailed rejection report listing every violation. You then have a fixed window (usually 10 business days) to fix the issues and resubmit. If you miss the window, you may have to restart the entire submission process.

Pre-Delivery QC: Your Responsibility

Before submitting to Netflix, you should perform your own rigorous QC:

The Netflix Submission Timeline

Netflix operates on strict delivery windows. Once your film is acquired, you'll receive a delivery schedule specifying the exact date by which all materials must be submitted. This typically allows 6–12 weeks from acquisition date. Missing the deadline pushes your release window forward by months.

To hit the deadline reliably, you need to begin the mastering and delivery process immediately after acquisition, ideally with a dedicated delivery manager overseeing every step. Assuming no major revisions are required, the timeline typically breaks down as follows:

Why Producers Need Delivery Expertise

Netflix's specifications are complex and non-intuitive to producers unfamiliar with the platform. A single oversight—a misidentified color space, a loudness measurement error, a malformed subtitle file—can trigger the entire delivery to be rejected and sent back for remediation. When that happens, you're not just resubmitting a file; you're potentially remixing audio, re-grading video, or hiring additional technicians to fix the error, all while the delivery window ticks down.

This is where complete delivery management becomes essential. A delivery manager with Netflix experience knows the common pitfalls, can conduct pre-delivery QC that mimics Netflix's process, and can coordinate with your colorist, mixer, and mastering house to ensure all materials meet spec before they ever reach Netflix's inbox.

Related Resources

About the Author

Dale Tanguay is a Post-Production Supervisor and film legal delivery expert. Owner of Carbon Arc Media, he has managed technical delivery and Netflix QC for multiple independent feature films, ensuring spec compliance and on-time delivery to the platform. Based in Universal City, CA. Contact Dale to discuss your Netflix delivery.