Every New True Crime Docuseries Released On Netflix In 2025 (So Far)

Netflix

Netflix touts an impressive lineup of true crime documentaries and series, but for die-hard fans who have already exhausted the library, the wait for new titles can be agonizing. Luckily, we already have seven new releases so far in 2025.

Check out each of them below!

Cold Case: The Tylenol Murders

This three-part docuseries tackles the 1982 cold case that killed seven in the Chicagoland area after bottles of Extra Strength Tylenol were poisoned with cyanide. The randomness of the deaths caused wide-spread panic that led to a national recall and challenged local and federal law enforcement. While one suspect, James William Lewis, was linked to a threatening letter, there was ultimately insufficient evidence to charge him with the crime. The case has been reopened multiple times over the years, but no one was ever charged, however, the lasting impact of tamper evident seals on the pharmaceutical industry is a direct result of the tragic case.

Oklahoma City Bombing: American Terror

This year marks the 30th anniversary of this deadly domestic terror attack that killed 168 and injured over 600 people, and this film revisits tragic events of Timothy McVeigh’s attack through a modern lens. Using a truck bomb filled with ammonium nitrate and fuel oil, and targeting the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, McVeigh harbored deeply radical anti-government sentiments following his service in the Gulf War. The film draws parallels to contemporary movements, includes never-before-seen footage, and highlights the impact the event had on law enforcement and surveillance.

A Deadly American Marriage

This documentary covers the 2015 death of Irish widow Jason Corbett, who was bludgeoned to death with a baseball bat and a concrete paver after relocating to North Carolina. His remarriage to former nanny, Molly, sparks investigation into her and her father, who claim Jason had been physically abusive. Using a combination of interviews, courtroom reconstruction, and media coverage, filmmakers are able to construct a story that has received praise for it’s sensitivity, especially towards Jason’s children and family.

Fred and Rose West: A British Horror Story

This three part docuseries covers the famed “House of Horrors” that was home to one of the UK’s most notorious serial killer couples. Fred and Rose West tortured, abused, and murdered at least twelve young women and girls between 1967 and 1987, and their own daughter Heather was among the victims, many of whom were buried in the couple’s backyard. Despite being an older case, the docuseries claims never-before-seen footage, as well as interviews with family members of victims who have chosen to speak publicly for the first time.

American Murder: Gabby Petito

True crime aficionados will immediately recognize this story from the widespread national news coverage the disappearance of the New York teen during a cross-country road trip with her fiancé, Brian Laundrie, whose evasion of law enforcement led to another high-profile search. Critics praise the chronological order of this documentary, which serves to refresh and reframe all of the media coverage. Interviews with Petito’s parents and nuance with the role of social media and domestic violence played in the case will give viewers a more in depth understanding of events.

Gone Girls: The Long Island Serial Killer

Covering a series of murders spanning almost two decades, from 1993 – 2011, this docuseries dives into the Gilgo Beach serial killings and is told from the perspective of the victims and their friends and family. The case originated as a search for Shannan Gilbert following her disappearance from a gated community in 2010.

The search led law enforcement to discover the remains of four victims who came to be known as “The Gilgo Four”, while Gilberts remains and five others where located later in 2011. It’s a wild case that led to the arrest of a Manhattan architect, when investigators relied not on a smoking gun, but a discarded pizza crust to piece together the events of the murders.

CHAOS: The Manson Murders

For true crime junkies, the Manson murders is akin to the Marvel or DC Universe. It’s the gift that keeps on giving, by continuously inspiring new content. This documentary adapts 2019’s CHAOS: Charles Manson, the CIA, and the Secret History of the Sixties written by Tom O’Neill with Dan Piepenbring. Mixed reviews praise the film for it’s analysis of the crime’s lasting cultural impact, but criticize the time it spends following red herrings without concrete conclusions.

American Nightmare

This true crime series covered the kidnapping of Denise Huskins in 2015, which police and FBI accused her of staging as a hoax in collaboration with her boyfriend, Aaron Quinn. Dubbed “the real Gone Girl” by the media, this docuseries does a great job of covering the details of the case in a succinct three-episode arc that presents a much happier ending than we can typically expect from this genre. A must-watch for its analysis of the role media plays in high profile cases.

Con Mum

Celebrity chef and TV judge Graham Hornigold had lived without knowing who or where his mother was his entire adult life until a woman by the name of Dionne reaches out claiming to be her, as well as the illegitimate child of the former Sultan of Brunei. She weaves astonishing webs of deception that con Hornigold and others out of hundreds of thousands of pounds, and puts an enormous strain on his marriage and the birth of his first child. Full of champagne, caviar, and Swiss bankers, this film is perfectly paced for a quick true crime fix.

Bad Influence: The Dark Side Of Kidfluencing

This three-episode docuseries covers YouTube star Piper Rockelle, her manager-mother Tiffany Smith, and a cohort of other child collaborators they recruited, examining the ways social media is somewhat of an unregulated “Wild West” when it comes to child entertainment and exploitation. Culminating in an high-profile lawsuit brought against Smith and her boyfriend in violation of child labor laws and sexually inappropriate behavior, it exposes the vulnerabilities minors face at the hands of coercive caretakers who view them as a means to generating attention, revenue, and “content”.

iHostage

This feature length thrilled is based on the true events of a 2022 hold-up of an Apple store in Amsterdam in which a gunman held a man hostage for five hours. It’s a crime that is close to home for director Bobby Boermans, literally, who lives near the actual store where the events took place. Taking a different approach to true-crime storytelling, the film reimagines and recreates the actual scenes and events, where a docuseries might only summarize. A must-watch for anyone who is looking for that firsthand experience as a viewer.

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