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Jordan Tucker

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Aug 2, 2024, 6:20:37 AM8/2/24
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The majority of people call Netflix to resolve issues relating to accessing accounts, consulting tech support for using their app/devices and changing/canceling subscription plans. Upon calling Netflix, you'll stay on the line for English or press 5 for Spanish.

If you're already a Netflix customer, the automated recording directs you to log in online at their website using your account info, and then enter into the phone's keypad a six-digit service code found at the bottom of the webpage. This method provides faster service over the phone.

Since I don't have a Neflix account, I couldn't take advantage of this expedited method. So, I waited for menu options but received none; instead, I was placed on hold to speak with a customer service representative. Music played, and then, the call went silent, so I hung up and called back.

I repeated the process by waiting on hold and was told by the automated system that my call would be answered in about 30 seconds. In about that time, a representative came on the line and asked if I had a current account. Since I was a new customer, she proceeded to share the variety of plans offered through Netflix, starting with a basic $6.99 monthly plan that allows you to watch limited shows and movies with ads up to a premium $22.99 monthly subscription for unlimited shows and movies with no ads.

In addition, the rep explained that you can access your Netflix subscription on multiple devices, based on the plan you purchase and can watch online through the website on a tablet, on a TV or via the app on any device. There are no contracts, she added, and you can cancel at any time. She reminded me that the monthly subscription payment will be processed automatically at the beginning of each billing cycle.

The rep was knowledgeable and patient without being pushy or persistent. She advised me to sign up online by choosing any plan, creating a password and adding a payment method. I was curious about any promotions, deals or trials that Netflix offers, but she confirmed that currently, there are no trial periods. She suggested I sign up for the basic subscription to try it out and upgrade to another plan at anytime.

She also shared that I could purchase a $25 gift card at any local retailer or online to try Netflix for a short time. This way, I could watch Netflix until the gift card amount runs out before making a decision. Gift cards are redeemed online.

Once I asked all my questions, the rep ensured that I had everything I needed before we hung up, and she again directed me to the website to set up an account once I was ready. While the website has extensive links to online help, I found calling customer support to be a productive and supportive use of time, thanks to an efficient and accessible team.

This is Netflix's best phone number, the real-time current wait on hold and tools for skipping right through those phone lines to get right to a Netflix agent. This phone number is Netflix's best phone number because 309,348 customers like you used this contact information over the last 18 months and gave us feedback. Common problems addressed by the customer care unit that answers calls to 800-585-8131 include Account Access, Cancel My Services, Refund a Charge, Request a Show, Streaming or Download Trouble and other customer service issues. The Netflix call center that you call into has employees from Colorado, Oregon, Michigan and is open 24 hours, 7 days according to customers. In total, Netflix has 5 phone numbers. It's not always clear what is the best way to talk to Netflix representatives, so we started compiling this information built from suggestions from the customer community. Please keep sharing your experiences so we can continue to improve this free resource.

GetHuman does not provide call center services or customer support operations for Netflix. The two organizations are not related. GetHuman builds free tools and shares information to help customers of companies like Netflix. For large companies that includes tools such as our GetHuman Phone, which allows you to call a company but skip the part where you wait on the line to get a live human rep. We continue to work on these tools to help customers like you (and ourselves!) navigate the messy phone menus, hold times, and confusion with customer service. As long as you keep sharing it with your friends and loved ones, we'll keep doing it.

Trying to reach Netflix for help with your account? If so, watch out for this crafty con. Scammers provide fake customer support numbers online and fool callers into purchasing unrelated computer software.

Here's how the scam works. You are having trouble with your Netflix account, so you search online for the customer support phone number. A quick search turns up what appears to be a legitimate toll-free number (1-888 or 1-844 number). You dial it, and a "representative" answers. This person declares that your Netflix account has been hacked. In one version, the scammer claimed a dozen people from across the globe all used a victim's account.

Skeptical? The "representative" says they can provide proof that your account was hacked. But first, they need remote access to your computer. Unfortunately, granting a scammer access can open you up to the risk of identity theft.

Scam artists can install malware that records passwords or hunts for personal information, such as bank account numbers. However, according to BBB Scam Tracker reports, this scam appears to be a pretext for selling computer security software. The expensive software - victims report paying between $200 and $900 - will do nothing to fix your Netflix account, which was never hacked in the first place.

Oddly enough I can call T-Mobile and the other line on my account works fine and I can text with no problem both on Wi-Fi and LTE so it seems Wi-Fi calling does nothing to help or hinder. Network settings have not changed.

Hey there! Do you happen to have the Netflix on Us active on your account? It comes with Family Allowances and can sometimes (for lack of a better term) glitch and cause an error with calls as though you have numbers blocked. The solution that I've found has been to reach out to care (either by 611, Message Us, or T-Force) and have them remove the feature, reboot your phone, add the feature back, reboot again. Everything should work fine after that! &#128512

I'm on an old T-Mobile one promo plan and there was no reason for any family allowances or restrictions on either line. since everything worked yesterday and did not today and no account changes were made it stood to reason that the SIM card was the issue.

my area is serviced by a 40-person team 3 hours away where only two of them work on the chatline weekly. I have had The Misfortune three times to get the same person who knows nothing of TMobile. Unfortunately in this case you cannot just request another team member.

Luckily I was savy enough to call in to 611 to have another sim card reactivated by number. Of course it was like a goat rope and trying to get the representative to understand what I was doing and why I was requesting it. However in the long run I figured it out and eventually they did what I asked them to do.

Hmm... Did your Tech Expert file a trouble ticket? You may want to reach out to T-Force via Facebook or Twitter, I've had some pretty complicated issues before and they were able to sort everything out.

The only thing I could think of would be if you had Family Allowances on the account WITH the Netflix feature. I'd definitely have the Netflix removed and check your add-ons via the my.t-mobile.com website.

I had the exact same issue and it was because we had Netflix active on our T-mobile One Plan before and just removed it on t-mobile.com. I was able to fix it solely using the web portal after you log in t-mobile.com.

After you log into your account, click "Contact Us" on the top navigation. And under "Plans & Usage", click "Add family allowances". As the account own, you need to check "Family Allowances". As what other said, this could be a bug from t-mobile that when you remove the Netflix service from your account you also remove this "Family Allowances" feature as well. Apparently without this, you can't make calls.

A year later I upgraded my computer and was going to sell the one I got last year, I went to do a full wipe of the drive and install Ventura OS. Upon setting it up and connecting to the internet I was presented with a message stating my device can be configured my Netflix remotely.

Of course I have no way of contacting Netflix IT to resolve this as I feel this is some mistake. Is there any way to get this unmanaged or removed? When I continue with the setup it takes to a screen where at the bottom I can see different servers like jamfcloud as if its trying to connect and then it brings me to a screen to sign in to google, if I do that it just errors out. My only way to bypass is to not connect to the internet but I had to downgrade back to Monetary in order to do so.

Hi. Unfortunately there is nothing anyone here on this forum can do to help with this (unless they happen to work in Netflix IT). What you're seeing is the device is enrolled in Apple Business Manager, and is trying to redirect the device to enroll in Netflix's MDM, which it sounds like is a Jamf cloud server. There's no way for an end user to bypass this. Only the company that the device is registered to can assist you.

If I may ask, where did you buy the Mac from? Was it someone selling it personally or a reseller of some kind? I'm sorry to say it, but there's as much a possibility that this Mac was stolen property and sold to you as it is that it's just a mistake on Netflix's part. The latter can and does happen of course. Sometimes devices are sold from a company and they forget to remove the device from Apple Business Manager.

If you're wondering why you didn't see the enrollment message back when you got it, but are seeing it now, well, a Mac can be enrolled in Apple Business Manager, but not actually be assigned to do remote enrollment on the Jamf server, and then later can be put into the queue for remote enrollment. So it's possible it wasn't set for enrollment at first, but somewhere along the line, got assigned to do the remote enrollment by someone at Netflix.

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