A burst of people signed up for Netflix this spring, after the streaming giant cracked down on password sharing.
The company ended June with more than 238 million subscribers, adding 5.9 million members since March.
That was bigger than expected and follows efforts by the company to re-ignite growth following unusual subscriber losses last spring.
It is also facing challenges from ongoing strikes in the US by writers and actors.
Netflix said it would spend less on content this year than expected as a result of the walkout – the industry’s biggest in six decades, while boss Ted Sarandos said “we need to get this strike to a conclusion”.
“This strike is not an outcome that we wanted,” he said. He said the company was committed to reaching an “equitable” agreement that helped the industry move into the future.
But he added: “We’ve got a lot of work to do.”
Netflix has been wrestling with a sharp slowdown in growth since the pandemic, as competition heats up, households grapple with rising costs and it reaches what analysts see as saturation point in some of its biggest markets.
In the first half of last year, it shed roughly 1 million accounts. Though it later more than made up those losses, the declines jolted the company and sent it scrambling to shore up its growth prospects.
Netflix said customers were enticed by new options it has introduced that cost less than a standard subscription.
The company introduced its “paid sharing” programme in the UK, US and other major markets in May, charging an extra fee if users want to share passwords with people outside their households.
In the UK, it asks a little less than half of the £10.99 cost of a standard subscription.
The programme is now present in more than 100 countries.
The company also launched a less expensive streaming plan with ads last year and cut prices in dozens of countries in February.
Netflix said few people had cancelled as a result of the password changes and it believed the programme would fuel similar subscriber gains in the months ahead.
It has estimated that more than 100 million households share passwords in breach of its official rules. (BBC)