Online Video Subscription Reached 2.24 Billion in 2025
Global online video subscriptions reached 2.24 billion at the end of 2025, up 17.6% year on year from 1.9 billion in 2024, according to Omdia.

Global online video subscriptions reached 2.24 billion at the end of 2025, up 17.6% year on year from 1.9 billion in 2024, according to Omdia. However, growth is expected to slow to single digits in 2026 as the market enters a more mature phase.
Meanwhile, global pay-TV subscriptions continued their gradual decline, falling 1.8% year on year to 1.03 billion. The balance of the global TV and video market continues to shift toward streaming, with online video accounting for 68.4% of the combined 3.3 billion subscriptions worldwide. In terms of revenue, online video overtook pay-TV for the first time in 2025. Online video revenue increased 13.5% to $176 billion while pay TV revenue declined 4% to $170 billion. Both figures include subscription and transactional revenue but exclude advertising.
A wide range of different trends are taking place at the local level across the markets Omdia tracks. A key common theme, however, is that new, lower-cost, ad-supported tiers have been attracting new subscribers into the online video segment. “The 17.6% increase in subscriptions in 2025 was the largest annual rise since 2021. That growth was driven, in particular, by subsidized ad-tier subscriptions offered by telcos and pay-TV operators. The popularity of these lower-cost offers is a key factor behind the 17.6% growth in subscription numbers. In comparison, revenue increased by a more moderate 13.5%,” said Adam Thomas, Practice Leader for the Media, Entertainment & Advertising team at Omdia.
Another clear trend across the sector is that online video platforms are changing their focus from growing subscriber numbers to maximizing revenue from their existing client base, often through price increases for their premium, non-ad-supported tiers. This trend is expected to remain prominent in the years ahead. While the 2025 figures show that discounted ad-tier pricing can attract significant numbers of cost-conscious subscribers into the online video ecosystem, this will be a short-term phenomenon. With several core online video markets approaching saturation, Omdia believes the focus on price rises to maximize profits will result in slower subscription growth, forecasting 5.6% growth for full-year 2026. “It’s clear that the availability of attractively priced ad-tier options created a temporary uplift in SVOD subscriber numbers in 2025. However, this has not changed our longer-term forecast, which remains for low single-digit annual growth rates for the foreseeable future,” added Tony Gunnarsson, Senior Principal Analyst for TV & Online Video at Omdia.