Letterboxd, the New Zealand-based social platform where over 30 million film fans log, rate, and review movies, has formally kicked off a sale process and the names circling it read like a who’s who of the entertainment world. Netflix, Sony Pictures Entertainment, and Paramount Skydance have all participated in early conversations, according to reports by Puck and TheWrap published on July 10, 2026. Private equity firms RedBird Capital Partners and TPG are also in the mix, as is Reddit co-founder and Seven Seven Six venture firm founder Alexis Ohanian, who responded to media queries about his interest with characteristic brevity: “Man I can’t sneeze without someone talking about it lol.”
LionTree, an investment bank, is managing the sale and has floated a valuation of around $250 million, which is a big increase from the $50 million to $60 million valuation at which Canadian holding firm Tiny acquired a 60% interest in 2023. Co-founders Matthew Buchanan and Karl von Randow, who created Letterboxd in Auckland following its inception in 2011, keep the remaining 40%. Buchanan apparently has veto power over any possible buyer, which means the transaction cannot close without his consent, regardless of the amount agreed upon. Letterboxd, Netflix, Sony Pictures, and Paramount declined to comment on the reports. Tiny and TPG representatives declined to comment.
“Could Letterboxd end up in the clutches of Netflix or another big entertainment corporation? Letterboxd has been shopping itself to interested parties. Netflix, Sony Pictures, Paramount Skydance, RedBird, TPG and Alexis Ohanian have all reportedly participated in early talks. LionTree is floating a $250 million valuation.”~Variety
What Drove Letterboxd’s Surge: From $50 Million to $250 Million in Two Years
The five-fold jump in valuation between 2023 and now reflects one thing above all: Letterboxd’s membership has exploded. As of June 2026, the platform has more than 30 million members globally having added 10 million members in the past year alone. The platform first gained mainstream traction during the COVID-19 pandemic, when homebound audiences turned to it not just to log films but to engage in the kind of movie discourse that once lived in cinemas and DVD rental stores. Since then, it has evolved into something genuinely hard to replicate: a community-driven film database with authentic user reviews, social features, and cultural cachet among cinephiles that algorithmic platforms like Netflix’s internal discovery tools simply cannot manufacture. Letterboxd has also recently launched an online video rental service, adding a transactional layer to what was previously a pure discovery and logging platform.
“Letterboxd may have a new majority owner in the near future. Netflix, Sony Pictures, Paramount, TPG and Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian are all in the mix. Investment bank LionTree is said to be handling the sale process, which reportedly pegs Letterboxd at a valuation of $250 million.”~Engadget
Why Netflix and Sony Want It: Discovery, Data and a Loyal Audience
Letterboxd’s attraction to a platform like Netflix is more strategic than financial. Netflix has long struggled with film discovery, its recommendation engine prioritizes watch time above cultural resonance and Letterboxd’s 30 million subscribers are among the most active and powerful film audiences in the world. Owning that platform would provide Netflix with a rich supply of preference data, a ready-made community through which to promote its films, and a substantial presence in the cultural debate surrounding cinema, which it presently lacks. For Sony Pictures, the argument is similar: controlling a platform where its films are reviewed, scored, and recommended by actual fans creates both a marketing channel and a data asset. Paramount is subject to the same calculations.
The broader media consolidation scenario is also important. Over the last four years, Amazon has acquired MGM, Warner Bros Discovery has merged and is on its way to combining with Paramount Skydance, and streaming has changed the economics of the whole entertainment sector. Letterboxd exists at the nexus of social media, cinema culture, and streaming discovery at a time when all three are critically important. That mix of unique audience loyalty, actual cultural influence, and a clean data asset makes a $250 million price tag feasible for a platform valued at $50 million only two years ago.
“Sony Pictures Entertainment is among several parties that have agreed to participate in initial meetings as Letterboxd shops itself for a potential sale. Others include Netflix and Paramount, private equity firms RedBird and TPG, and Reddit co-creator Alexis Ohanian.”~The Wrap
Nothing Is Finalised And the Co-Founders Have the Final Say:
Despite the number of heavyweight names in the mix, these are still early-stage conversations. No deal has been agreed, no price has been locked in, and Letterboxd has declined to confirm any details about where the talks might lead. Critically, co-founder Matthew Buchanan’s reported veto rights mean that even if Tiny as majority shareholder were to agree to a sale, Buchanan would need to sign off on the buyer.
At a time when film communities are understandably concerned about what corporate ownership might do to a platform that has built its reputation on being the exact opposite of algorithmically curated, this gives the founders significant control over the platform’s future. It’s still very much up in the air whether Letterboxd becomes part of a studio, a streaming behemoth, a private equity portfolio, or remains independent.
“Letterboxd, the beloved film social network with 30 million members, is in early acquisition talks with Netflix, Sony Pictures, Paramount Skydance, RedBird, TPG and Alexis Ohanian. LionTree is running the process at a reported $250 million valuation. Co-founder Matthew Buchanan holds veto rights over any buyer.”~Puck




