- Incredibly swift change has taken place within online video and pay-TV during the COVID-19 pandemic
- The rapid growth exhibited by online video predominantly comes from existing users taking more subscriptions, rather than new adopters
- There will be no renaissance for traditional TV viewing
LONDON, 25 January, 2022 – Dramatic change has been experienced by the TV and video business over the past couple of years according to new research released by Omdia. Recent advances by the online video sector have seen it catch up with and overtake pay TV. At the end of 2021, online video had around 1.26 billion global subscriptions, while pay TV had 1.07 billion. As well as comparing the two market segments individually, Omdia’s new Multisubscription TV and Video research further explores the important crossover between the two sectors.
COVID-19 has accelerated trends that were already underway, with a spike in online video subscriptions during the pandemic offering some proof of this impact. One of the most striking findings of the multisubscription research is the incredibly swift change that has taken place within pay-TV households. Among the 10 countries analysed by the study there are more than one billion pay-TV & online video subscriptions. Of that total, by the end of 2021, 61.2% were in households taking both a pay-TV and online video subscription. Before the pandemic that total was 50.9%. To illustrate the impact further, the number of subscriptions in households taking only a pay TV subscription was 17.5% at end-2021, down from a pre-pandemic figure of 33% – a trend driven by former standalone pay-TV households acting in their droves to add an online video subscription.
“Although the growth in online video subscriptions has been the most eye-catching recent trend, traditional TV viewing also saw a significant spike in viewing time – again driven by the greater number of people at home looking for viewing entertainment” says Omdia Senior Principal Analyst Adam Thomas. “This reversed a long-term trend of viewing time decline among traditional viewing formats and prompted some hopes of a sustained renewal of interest in traditional TV viewing. However, our analysis indicates that, after a spike, traditional TV has quickly returned to pre-COVID viewing patterns, and this informs our assumption that online video will continue to thrive following its COVID boost, but there will be no renaissance for traditional TV viewing formats. However, traditional TV viewing will continue to form an important part of the viewing mix as we move toward a streaming-first future.”
Omdia’s multisubscription data shows that the number of homes not paying for a TV or video service continues to grow slowly. Across the 10 countries there were 2.17 billion unique users in the “not paid-for TV & video” category in 2015, rising to 2.40 billion in 2025. That equates to 39.2% of the potential TV/video viewing population in 2015, rising to 39.6% in 2025. The stability shown by this segment indicates that much of the growth exhibited by online video comes from existing users taking more subscriptions, rather than huge numbers of new households moving from free to paid.
With online video subscriptions available at a fraction of the price of classic pay-TV subscriptions, why isn’t the paid-for category as a whole growing at the expense of the non-pay sector? Omdia believes the attractive free-to-view viewing options available satisfy the viewing demands of a significant segment of the population. As the market continues to transition, Omdia expects that AVOD and FAST services will continue to rise in popularity, and usage of such services will dampen demand for paid-for subscriptions.
Note: The 10 countries included in this study are: Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, India, Japan, Mexico, the UK, and the US
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