Watch Cartoons and English-Dubbed Anime Online Free (Legally) in 2026
You can watch cartoons online free and legally in 2026 on Tubi, Pluto TV, the Internet Archive, official YouTube studio channels, Plex, and PBS Kids. The Internet Archive uniquely offers public-domain classics, while PBS Kids is the safest pick for young children.
From Saturday-morning classics to modern animated series — and the English-dubbed anime that sits right alongside them — you can watch a huge amount of cartoons online completely free and legally in 2026. Tubi and Pluto TV carry the biggest legal animation libraries, the Internet Archive is the unique home of public-domain classics, and PBS Kids is the safest option for young children. Here are six legal sources, what each does best, and the one thing you need to understand about public-domain cartoons before you hit play.
6 ways to watch cartoons online free and legally
1. Tubi — the deepest free animation library
Tubi, owned by Fox, is the best all-around free source for cartoons. Its catalog of nearly 300,000 movies and TV episodes includes a substantial animation section spanning Western cartoons, animated movies, and a deep anime library. In early 2026 Tubi also added a wave of Warner Bros. and Cartoon Network catalog titles, strengthening its classic-cartoon offering. What's free: everything. Account: not required. Where: tubitv.com.
2. Pluto TV — 24/7 cartoon and anime channels
Pluto TV's roughly 425 channels (as of January 2026) include dedicated kids' and cartoon channels plus 24/7 anime blocks. It runs like cable: pick a channel and lean back. What's free: all of it. Account: none. Where: pluto.tv. Great for background viewing and for kids who do not want to choose.
3. Internet Archive — the public-domain classics vault
This is the source you will not find anywhere else. The Internet Archive (archive.org) hosts thousands of public-domain cartoons — classic Looney Tunes shorts, early Popeye, Betty Boop, Superman, Felix the Cat, and more — that are free to stream because their copyrights have lapsed. What's free: public-domain uploads. Account: none. Important caveat: rights vary per upload. The Internet Archive is a user-uploaded library, so not every item is genuinely public domain, and some uploads may be removed if a rights-holder objects. Stick to clearly labeled public-domain collections. 2026 note: the earliest (1930) Betty Boop incarnation entered the U.S. public domain on January 1, 2026, joining Popeye's 1929 debut and the earliest Mickey Mouse shorts — so the legal pool of classic animation keeps growing each New Year's Day.
4. Official YouTube studio channels
Studios run official YouTube channels with free, ad-supported cartoons. WB Kids posts classic Looney Tunes and other Warner animation, and various official studio channels upload full episodes. What's free: whatever the official channels post. Account: none. Where: search for verified studio channels on youtube.com — look for the official channel checkmark and avoid random re-uploads.
5. Plex — cartoons alongside free movies and live TV
Plex's free ad-supported catalog includes animation and a rotating anime selection, all in one browser-based app. What's free: the ad-supported library and live channels. Account: a free Plex account. Where: plex.tv.
6. PBS Kids — the safest pick for young children
For little kids, PBS Kids is the cleanest, safest free option: trusted educational programming with no questionable ads and a kid-friendly interface. Stream it free at pbskids.org — favorites like Sesame Street, Curious George, and Odd Squad, with no account and no cost. If you are choosing a single safe destination for a young child, this is it.
Public domain vs. licensed: what's the difference?
Understanding this distinction keeps you on the right side of the law and away from sketchy sites:
- Public-domain cartoons are old enough that their copyright has expired, so anyone can legally stream, share, and even remix them. This is why the Internet Archive can host classic Looney Tunes and Betty Boop shorts for free — no license needed. Public-domain status is added year by year on Public Domain Day (January 1), and only the specific original versions enter the pool, not later, still-copyrighted iterations.
- Licensed cartoons are still under copyright, so a service must pay for the rights to show them. Tubi, Pluto TV, Plex, and PBS Kids all carry licensed animation because they have those deals in place — which is what makes them legal and safe. A random site offering current Cartoon Network or Disney shows for free, with no corporate backing, almost certainly does not have a license and is best avoided.
The simple rule: if a service is owned by a known company (Fox, Paramount, Roku, PBS) or clearly hosts public-domain material (Internet Archive), it is legal. If it is an anonymous site promising every current cartoon for free, it is not.
Adding dubbed anime to the mix
Cartoons and anime go hand in hand, and the same free services double as anime sources. Tubi has a deep English-dub library (Naruto, Bleach, Dragon Ball Z), Pluto TV runs 24/7 dubbed anime channels, and RetroCrush specializes in classic dubbed anime. For the full breakdown — including the 2026 Crunchyroll changes — see our dedicated guide to where to watch free dubbed anime legally. And if you want curated picks rather than a sites list, our roundup of the best anime on Netflix covers what to actually watch.
The bottom line
For the widest free cartoon selection, start with Tubi and Pluto TV. For nostalgic public-domain classics, browse the Internet Archive. For young kids, go straight to PBS Kids. All are legal, all are free, and none requires a download. For free movies beyond animation, our guide to watching films without signing up or downloading uses these same safe, browser-based services.



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