June 10, 2026
How to Make a Netflix-Style Website for Your Girlfriend (Free, No Code)
June 10, 2026 · 6 min read
You both spend half your evenings on Netflix. So imagine she opens a link, sees the familiar "Who's watching?" screen — except every profile is about her. She taps her name, the red N-style intro plays, and she lands on a browse page where the featured show is your relationship.
That's a Netflix-style website. It's the kind of gift she screenshots, sends to her group chat, and remembers long after flowers would have wilted. And you can build one in under 10 minutes — no coding, no design skills.
What is a "Netflix-style" love website?
It's a personal web page styled like the Netflix app, made for one person. Instead of generic movies and shows, every element is about your relationship:
- A "Who's watching?" profile-select screen with her name and photo
- A cinematic intro animation (a heart-shaped take on the classic red logo)
- A browse home page with a hero banner — the featured "title" is you two
- Rows like "Top Reasons I Like You" and "Continue Watching Us"
- An interactive episode where she taps choices that branch the story — and every path leads to your message or your big question
On Your Love Page this template is called LoveFlix, and it's the most interactive design we make. She isn't just reading a page; she's playing through it.
Why a Netflix theme lands so hard
A plain "I love you" text is easy to scroll past. A Netflix-style page works for three reasons:
- Instant recognition. The "Who's watching?" screen is one of the most familiar interfaces on Earth. Seeing it personalized for her creates an immediate double-take.
- It's interactive, not passive. She makes choices. That turns a gift into an experience she actively moves through — which makes it far more memorable.
- Effort is visible. A link with her name in the preview signals you actually made something. Perceived effort is what makes romantic gestures feel genuine.
If you've read our guide on how to create a romantic website for your partner, this is the same idea — turned up to cinematic.
Step 1: Open the LoveFlix template
Head to the editor and pick the LoveFlix (Netflix theme) template. You'll start on the profile screen — exactly what she'll see first.
Tip: Build this one on a laptop or desktop. LoveFlix is cinematic and has several screens to set up, so a bigger screen makes it much faster. (You can still edit on a phone, but desktop is far easier.)
Step 2: Set up the "Who's watching?" profile
Add her name and a photo to the main profile. This is the first thing she sees, so use a photo you both love — a candid one usually beats a posed one. The other "profiles" are playful decoys (like a locked "The Ex") that set the tone before she even taps in.
Step 3: Build the browse page about her
This is the heart of it. You'll fill in:
- The hero banner — a big featured "title." Set the title art (e.g. "Us: The Beginning"), a one-line synopsis, and a hero photo.
- "Continue Watching Us" — small cards, each a memory with a photo and a caption.
- "Top Reasons I Like You" — a ranked list with the giant Netflix-style numbers. Be specific here. "The way you still text me goodnight even when you're exhausted" beats "you're nice."
- "Trending In My World" — inside jokes and little moments.
Don't have a ton of photos? That's fine — you can remove individual photo cards so the page only shows what you have. A few real moments beat a wall of filler.
Step 4: Write the interactive episode
When she presses Play, she enters an interactive episode — think Bandersnatch, but romantic. She's given choices ("A rainy café" or "A walk under the stars"), and the story branches as she taps. There's even a countdown timer on each choice, just like the real thing.
Every path quietly funnels to the same place: the season finale, where your message or your question waits. Edit the narration and both choice labels for each scene, then write your finale line — for an ask-out, this is your "Will you go out with me?" moment.
When she taps Yes, red curtains part to reveal a "Renewed for Season 2" card with confetti and the signature sound. (If she's feeling cheeky and reaches for "No," the button has a few tricks of its own.)
Step 5: Preview, publish, and send the link
Hit preview to play through it exactly as she will. When it's right, publish to get a shareable link.
How to send it for maximum impact:
- Send just the link, no explanation — let the preview and the "Who's watching?" screen do the work.
- Send it in the evening, when she has time to sit with it, not mid-workday.
- Ask her to open it on a laptop or desktop if she can. LoveFlix is cinematic, and the browse page and episode shine on a bigger screen.
Is it really free?
You can build and preview the entire thing for free. The free tier publishes a page that stays live for 24 hours — perfect if you're sending it for a specific occasion. LoveFlix is a premium Premiere design, so making it a permanent, watermark-free page is a one-time upgrade. See current pricing on the pricing page.
When to use a Netflix-style website
- Asking her out — the interactive episode builds to your question
- Anniversary or monthsary — frame your relationship as a binge-worthy series (see our monthsary gift ideas)
- Long distance — a shared "show" she can replay any time you're apart
- Birthday — a personalized "special" streaming just for her
The bottom line
A Netflix-style website works because it takes something she already loves and makes it unmistakably about her. It's interactive, it's recognizable, and it shows real effort — the three things that make a digital gift actually land.
You don't need to code it. You just need ten minutes and a few honest words.