Spending on AR and VR Will Reach $17.8 Billion in 2018

Spending on AR and VR Will Reach $17.8 Billion in 2018
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Worldwide spending on augmented reality and virtual reality (AR/VR) is forecast to reach $17.8 billion in 2018, an increase of nearly 95% over the $9.1 billion, IDC expects will be spent this year. A new update to IDC's Worldwide Semiannual Augmented and Virtual Reality Spending Guide also shows that worldwide spending on AR/VR products and services will continue to grow at a similar rate throughout the remainder of the 2017-2021 forecast period, achieving a five-year compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 98.8%.

"Virtual reality will continue to drive greater levels of spending in the next 12-18 months, as both consumer and commercial use cases gain traction. There is currently a huge appetite from companies that see tremendous potential in the technology, from product design to retail sales to employee training," said Tom Mainelli, program vice president, Devices and AR/VR at IDC. "Meanwhile, the augmented reality market will deliver more modest levels of spending near term with mobile AR on smartphones and tablets likely to garner the most attention from consumers, while head-mounted displays will primarily sell into commercial use cases.

The consumer sector will remain the single largest source of spending for AR/VR products and services with worldwide spending in 2018 expected to reach $6.8 billion. Nearly three quarters of this total will be for VR hardware and software while AR spending will be dominated by software purchases. Gaming will be the dominant AR/VR use case for consumers throughout the forecast period. The five-year CAGR for consumer AR/VR spending will be 45.2% with total spending exceeding $20 billion in 2021.

In contrast, the commercial sectors will represent more than 60% of AR/VR spending in 2018 and grow to more than 85% of the worldwide total in 2021. Each of the five commercial sectors is forecast to undergo triple-digit spending growth throughout the forecast, led by the public sector with a five-year CAGR of 156.7%. The largest of the commercial sectors in 2018 will be distribution and services ($4.1 billion), led by the retail, transportation, and professional services industries. The second largest sector will be manufacturing and resources ($3.2 billion) with balanced spending across the process manufacturing, construction, and discrete manufacturing industries. Retail will be the industry with the largest AR/VR spending in 2018, followed by the process manufacturing and construction industries.

Commercial use cases will vary from sector to sector and industry to industry. In the distribution and services sector, retail showcasing and online retail showcasing will be the two largest use cases with combined spending of more than $950 million in 2018. Online retail showcasing will also experience exceptional spending growth with a five-year CAGR of 225%. Onsite assembly and safety, process manufacturing training, and industrial maintenance will be the largest use cases in the manufacturing and resource sector. In the public sector, infrastructure maintenance and government training will be the two largest use cases in 2018.

"Commercial entities are ready to embrace virtual reality for both customer-facing use cases and internal ones," said Marcus Torchia, research director of IDC Customer Insights & Analysis. "There are a lot of opportunities here to develop commercial-grade hardware and applications that meet the needs of these industries. Meanwhile, phone-based AR is likely to garner most of the excitement for the near term and many companies are already experimenting with AR apps and services. Some of these will be useful, many won't be, but over the course of the next 12-18 months, we should start to see developers beginning to grasp the potential of AR.

On a geographic basis, the United States will be the region with the largest AR/VR spending total in 2018 ($6.4 billion), followed by Asia/Pacific (excluding Japan)(APeJ) ($5.1 billion) and Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA) ($3.0 billion). The U.S. will experience some acceleration in growth over the forecast period, with spending expected to peak in 2020. Meanwhile, APeJ will see its spending growth slow somewhat by the end of the forecast. Both regions will see five-year CAGRs in excess of 100%, trailing Canada (139.9% CAGR) and Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) (113.5% CAGR) as the fastest growing regions. The slowest regional growth will be in Japan, where the CAGR will only reach 36.5%.