Insights Insights

September 26, 2025

How many Americans watch ad-supported streaming? (Q2 2025)

  • 72%

    TV viewing time that is ad-supported

  • 83%

    U.S. adults who watch streaming

  • +43%

    Growth in ad-supported viewing (2025)

According to Nielsen's Ad Supported Gauge, 72.4% of the time U.S. viewers spend with television is ad-supported. This includes both traditional broadcast/cable (which is entirely ad-supported) and the growing ad-supported streaming segment. Pew Research reports that 83% of U.S. adults watch streaming services, creating a massive addressable audience for advertisers. The convergence of high streaming adoption and expanding ad-supported options has transformed television advertising, making it more accessible to businesses of all sizes.

Understanding ad-supported streaming requires distinguishing between different viewer segments. Some viewers watch only subscription-supported (ad-free) streaming. Others watch free ad-supported streaming services (FAST) like Tubi, Pluto TV, and The Roku Channel. An increasing number watch ad-supported tiers of premium services like Netflix, Disney+, Hulu, and Prime Video. For advertisers, the addressable audience includes viewers across all ad-supported options, representing the majority of television consumption.

What the data shows

Multiple data sources confirm the dominance of ad-supported television viewing.

Ad-supported viewing share

Nielsen's research reveals the scale of ad-supported viewing:

  • 72.4%: Share of TV viewing time that is ad-supported

  • +43%: Growth in ad-supported streaming viewing in 2025

  • Growing: Ad-supported streaming share continues expanding as premium services add ad tiers

  • Majority: Most television consumption is addressable for advertisers

This 72.4% includes both traditional TV (broadcast, cable) which is entirely ad-supported and ad-supported streaming options. The combined figure shows that nearly three-quarters of all TV viewing presents advertising opportunities.

Streaming adoption metrics

Pew Research data shows streaming's near-universal adoption:

  • 83%: U.S. adults who watch streaming services

  • 56%: U.S. adults subscribing to three or more streaming services

  • Far exceeding: Cable/satellite subscriptions now below 50%

  • Growing: Streaming adoption continues increasing across demographics

The 83% streaming adoption rate means advertisers can reach the vast majority of American adults through streaming platforms.

Ad-supported tier adoption

Premium streaming services' ad-supported tiers have seen strong adoption:

  • 68%: Amazon Prime Video subscribers on ad-supported tier (default with ads)

  • 40%+: Netflix ad tier share of new subscribers

  • Majority: Most Hulu subscribers on ad-supported plans

  • Growing: Disney+ ad tier adoption increasing

These adoption rates show that premium streaming viewers increasingly accept advertising in exchange for lower subscription costs.

Free ad-supported streaming (FAST) growth

Free ad-supported streaming services have grown significantly:

  • Tubi: 84 million monthly active users

  • Pluto TV: 85 million monthly active users

  • Roku Channel: 2.8% of total TV viewing

  • Growing: FAST services adding users and viewing share consistently

Free services provide an entry point for streaming viewers who prefer not to pay for subscriptions, creating substantial ad-supported inventory.

Platform Comparison V2

Breaking down the numbers

Understanding the composition of ad-supported viewing helps advertisers target effectively.

The ad-supported viewing landscape

Ad-supported viewing spans multiple categories:

Traditional TV (broadcast + cable): All traditional television is ad-supported, representing approximately 40-45% of total TV viewing. While declining, this remains significant inventory.

Premium streaming ad tiers: Netflix, Disney+, Hulu, Prime Video, Max, and Peacock all offer ad-supported options. These services represent growing, high-quality inventory in premium content environments.

Free ad-supported streaming (FAST): Tubi, Pluto TV, Roku Channel, Freevee, and others provide free viewing with advertising. Higher ad loads but growing audiences.

Live streaming: Sports and news on streaming platforms add live ad-supported inventory with high engagement.

Why ad-supported streaming is growing

Several factors drive ad-supported streaming growth:

Subscription fatigue: Consumers subscribing to multiple services face cost pressure. Ad-supported tiers provide savings.

Default positioning: Amazon making ads default on Prime Video demonstrated the power of opt-out versus opt-in for ad tiers.

Content quality: Ad-supported tiers offer the same content as ad-free options on most services.

Price sensitivity: Economic pressures make consumers more willing to accept ads in exchange for savings.

FAST discovery: Free services attract viewers who then become regular users.

Premium versus free ad-supported

Ad-supported streaming splits into premium and free categories with different characteristics:

Premium ad-supported (Netflix, Disney+, Hulu, Prime Video):

  • Lower ad loads (4-6 minutes per hour)

  • Higher-income viewer demographics

  • Premium original content

  • Higher CPMs ($25-45)

Free ad-supported (Tubi, Pluto TV, Roku Channel):

  • Higher ad loads (8-12+ minutes per hour)

  • Broader demographic range

  • Mix of licensed and original content

  • Lower CPMs ($10-20)

Both categories offer value; the choice depends on advertiser objectives and budget.

Demographic patterns

Ad-supported streaming adoption varies somewhat by demographics:

Age: Younger viewers show higher streaming adoption overall but similar willingness to accept ads. Older viewers have lower streaming adoption but high traditional TV usage (ad-supported by default).

Income: Lower-income households show higher ad-supported tier adoption; higher-income households more likely to pay for ad-free options but still substantial ad-supported usage.

Geography: Urban and suburban areas show higher streaming adoption; rural areas have higher traditional TV reliance.

Overall, ad-supported viewing spans all demographics, though composition varies.

Age Demographics V2

Why it matters for your business

The scale of ad-supported viewing creates significant opportunities for advertisers.

Near-universal reach through ad-supported channels

With 72% of TV viewing ad-supported and 83% of adults streaming, advertisers can reach nearly all consumers through ad-supported television. For small business TV advertising, this means television is now a viable reach channel regardless of budget.

Growing inventory keeps costs reasonable

The expansion of ad-supported streaming creates abundant inventory:

  • More services offering ad tiers means more inventory

  • More viewers choosing ad-supported means more reach

  • Supply growth has kept CPMs relatively stable despite demand

For advertisers, this abundant inventory translates to accessible pricing and broad reach.

Premium content environments

Ad-supported doesn't mean low quality. Advertisers can now reach viewers watching:

  • Award-winning original series on Netflix, Prime Video, and Hulu

  • Major theatrical releases on streaming platforms

  • Live sports on Amazon, Peacock, and YouTube TV

  • Premium news content on major network streaming apps

The prestige of TV advertising is available through streaming's ad-supported tiers.

Targeting advantages over traditional TV

Ad-supported streaming combines traditional TV's big-screen engagement with digital targeting:

  • Geographic targeting for local businesses

  • Demographic targeting for specific audience segments

  • Behavioral targeting based on viewing patterns

  • Frequency management across devices

These capabilities make ad-supported streaming more efficient than traditional TV for many advertisers.

Business Opportunity V2

How to take advantage of this trend

Reaching ad-supported streaming viewers requires strategic approach to platform selection and campaign execution.

Access multiple ad-supported sources

Rather than choosing a single streaming platform, aggregated platforms combine inventory:

  • 100+ channels: Platforms like Adwave aggregate inventory across services

  • Mixed inventory: Premium and free ad-supported combined

  • Optimized delivery: Platform optimizes across sources

  • Simple buying: One interface for diverse inventory

This approach maximizes reach across the fragmented streaming landscape.

Balance premium and free inventory

Consider your objectives when balancing inventory types:

For brand building: Prioritize premium inventory with lower ad loads and higher-quality content environment.

For broad reach: Include free ad-supported services for maximum reach at efficient CPMs.

For testing: Start with aggregated platforms that automatically balance across sources.

For specific audiences: Consider which platforms your target audience uses.

Leverage geographic targeting

For local businesses, geographic targeting focuses ad-supported reach on relevant viewers:

  • Target by DMA, state, zip code, or radius

  • Reach streaming viewers in your service area

  • Avoid paying for nationwide reach you don't need

  • Local TV advertising is now practical through streaming

Create effective streaming creative

Ad-supported streaming viewers see non-skippable ads in engaged viewing contexts. Effective creative:

  • Leads with value proposition

  • Maintains interest throughout the spot

  • Includes clear branding

  • Provides memorable call to action

  • Designs for big-screen viewing

AI-powered creative tools (like Adwave's) can generate effective streaming commercials from existing assets.

The bigger picture

Ad-supported streaming's growth reflects fundamental shifts in television economics and viewer behavior.

The advertising-supported future

Industry trends point toward continued ad-supported growth:

  • Premium services all now offer ad tiers

  • Ad tier pricing increasingly competitive versus ad-free

  • Viewer acceptance of streaming ads has normalized

  • FAST services continue gaining viewers

The prediction that streaming would remain primarily ad-free has been reversed; advertising is central to streaming's future.

Traditional TV's continued role

Despite streaming growth, traditional TV remains significant:

  • Still represents 40-45% of viewing

  • Entirely ad-supported (broadcast, cable)

  • Important for older demographics

  • Live sports maintains appointment viewing

Advertisers shouldn't abandon traditional TV entirely but should recognize streaming's growing importance.

The aggregation opportunity

The fragmentation of ad-supported streaming creates opportunity for aggregators:

  • Viewers spread across dozens of services

  • Advertisers need reach across services

  • Aggregated platforms solve fragmentation

  • Self-serve tools democratize access

Platforms aggregating ad-supported inventory make television advertising practical for businesses that couldn't manage direct relationships with multiple streaming services.

Industry investment validation

Major industry investment in ad-supported streaming validates the trend:

  • Netflix, Amazon, Disney betting billions on ad-supported

  • Measurement companies building streaming attribution

  • Creative tools reducing production barriers

  • Self-serve platforms expanding access

This investment suggests ad-supported streaming will remain and grow as advertising channel.

Growth Trend V2

Common questions answered

What percentage of TV viewing is ad-supported?

According to Nielsen, approximately 72.4% of TV viewing time in the United States is ad-supported. This includes both traditional television (broadcast, cable) which is entirely ad-supported and ad-supported streaming options. The remaining approximately 28% represents ad-free streaming subscription viewing.

How many Americans watch ad-supported streaming?

With 83% of U.S. adults watching streaming services (Pew Research) and the majority of streaming viewing now occurring on ad-supported tiers, the addressable audience through ad-supported streaming is approximately 200+ million Americans. The exact figure depends on how ad-supported viewing is defined and measured.

Why is ad-supported streaming growing?

Ad-supported streaming is growing due to subscription fatigue (consumers seeking savings), premium services adding ad tiers, Amazon making ads default on Prime Video, and continued growth of free ad-supported services (FAST) like Tubi and Pluto TV. The +43% growth in ad-supported streaming viewing in 2025 reflects these combined factors.

Can small businesses reach ad-supported streaming viewers?

Yes, small businesses can reach ad-supported streaming viewers through aggregated CTV platforms like Adwave, which provide access to 100+ channels with campaigns starting at $50. These platforms combine inventory from premium ad-supported services and free streaming platforms, making broad reach accessible without large budgets.

What's the difference between premium and free ad-supported streaming?

Premium ad-supported streaming (Netflix, Disney+, Hulu with ads, Prime Video) offers lower ad loads (4-6 minutes per hour), higher-quality original content, and higher CPMs ($25-45). Free ad-supported streaming (Tubi, Pluto TV, Roku Channel) has higher ad loads (8-12+ minutes), licensed content libraries, and lower CPMs ($10-20). Both offer value for different advertising objectives.

How does ad-supported streaming compare to traditional TV advertising?

Ad-supported streaming offers similar big-screen engagement to traditional TV but adds digital targeting (geographic, demographic), deterministic measurement (impression-level tracking), and lower minimum budgets (starting at $50 versus thousands for traditional TV). Traditional TV still reaches viewers not yet streaming and maintains live sports and news audiences.

What is FAST streaming?

FAST stands for Free Ad-Supported Streaming Television. FAST services like Tubi, Pluto TV, Freevee, and The Roku Channel offer free content supported entirely by advertising. FAST services have grown significantly, with major services reaching 80+ million monthly active users and capturing growing shares of total TV viewing.

Are ad-supported streaming viewers different from ad-free subscribers?

Ad-supported streaming viewers tend to be somewhat more price-sensitive and may skew slightly younger and lower-income than ad-free premium subscribers. However, the differences are relatively modest, and ad-supported audiences span all demographics. Premium ad-supported tiers (Netflix, Disney+) attract audiences very similar to their ad-free tiers.

How many ads do viewers see on ad-supported streaming?

Ad loads vary by platform. Premium ad-supported tiers typically show 4-6 minutes of ads per hour. Free ad-supported services show 8-12+ minutes per hour. Traditional television shows 15-20 minutes per hour. Lower ad loads on premium streaming may improve ad effectiveness through reduced clutter.

Will ad-supported streaming continue growing?

Yes, ad-supported streaming is expected to continue growing. Premium services are investing heavily in ad-supported tiers, free services continue adding users, and viewer acceptance of streaming ads has normalized. Industry analysts project continued double-digit growth in ad-supported streaming viewing and advertising spend.

What industries benefit most from ad-supported streaming advertising?

All consumer-facing industries benefit from ad-supported streaming's reach and targeting capabilities. Local service businesses (restaurants, healthcare, real estate, professional services) particularly benefit from geographic targeting. Retail, CPG, automotive, and entertainment are among the largest ad-supported streaming advertisers.

How should businesses allocate budget between ad-supported streaming and other channels?

Budget allocation depends on objectives and current marketing mix. For businesses seeking brand awareness and broad reach, allocating 20-40% of video/TV budget to ad-supported streaming is increasingly common. For testing, 10-15% of marketing budget can fund meaningful streaming experiments. Ad-supported streaming works well alongside social media and search advertising.

How do ad-supported streaming audiences compare to social media audiences?

Ad-supported streaming and social media audiences overlap significantly but differ in viewing context. Ad-supported streaming provides lean-back, big-screen viewing with high completion rates and engaged attention. Social media provides lean-forward, phone-based viewing with scroll-prone attention and skip-prone ad formats. Many advertisers use both channels: streaming for brand building and awareness, social for direct response and engagement.

What measurement capabilities exist for ad-supported streaming advertising?

Ad-supported streaming offers robust measurement including reach and frequency reporting, impression-level tracking, ad completion rates, website attribution (tracking visitors from ad exposure), and conversion tracking with proper setup. These capabilities exceed traditional TV's panel-based estimates, enabling more precise campaign optimization and ROI measurement.

Are ad-supported streaming viewers more receptive to advertising?

Research suggests ad-supported streaming viewers may be more receptive to advertising than traditional TV viewers. Lower ad loads (4-6 minutes versus 15-20 on traditional TV) reduce ad fatigue. Active content selection creates engaged viewing contexts. Premium content environments provide positive brand associations. However, receptivity varies by viewer and content type.

How does ad-supported streaming fit into a full-funnel marketing strategy?

Ad-supported streaming typically serves top-of-funnel (awareness) and mid-funnel (consideration) objectives. The big-screen format and premium content environment build brand awareness and consideration. Retargeting capabilities enable nurturing viewers toward conversion. Many advertisers combine streaming advertising with search and social for full-funnel coverage, using streaming for awareness that drives search and social engagement.

What is the typical ad completion rate on ad-supported streaming?

Ad-supported streaming achieves near 100% completion rates for most ad inventory because ads are non-skippable. This contrasts with skippable formats on some digital platforms where completion rates are much lower. High completion rates mean advertisers get full message delivery, though this also means creative quality matters significantly since viewers will see the entire ad regardless.

How has Amazon Prime Video's ad launch affected ad-supported streaming?

Amazon's January 2024 decision to make Prime Video ad-supported by default significantly expanded the ad-supported streaming market. With 90+ million U.S. subscribers and approximately 68% remaining on ad-supported viewing, Prime Video instantly became one of the largest ad-supported streaming audiences. This move validated the ad-supported model and influenced other services' strategies.

Key trends shaping ad-supported streaming include: continued growth of premium ad tiers as services optimize pricing, expansion of shoppable ad formats enabling direct purchase, improved measurement and attribution capabilities, growth of live sports streaming with advertising, and further consolidation making large-scale reach simpler. The ad-supported streaming opportunity will continue expanding as these trends develop.

How do viewer demographics on ad-supported streaming compare to traditional TV?

Ad-supported streaming viewers tend to be younger than traditional TV viewers, with stronger representation of 18-49 year olds that advertisers value. Traditional TV skews older, with stronger representation of 50+ viewers. Income distribution is broadly similar, though free ad-supported services skew slightly lower income while premium ad tiers are comparable to ad-free subscribers. Geographic distribution is similar across channels.

What role does live content play in ad-supported streaming growth?

Live content, particularly sports, is becoming a significant driver of ad-supported streaming growth. Amazon's Thursday Night Football, Peacock's exclusive NFL games, Apple TV+'s MLB coverage, and upcoming NBA streaming deals are bringing live sports to streaming platforms. Live content offers high-engagement advertising environments with appointment viewing that streaming's on-demand content sometimes lacks. BCG estimates live CTV advertising alone is reaching $8-9 billion in 2025.

How do advertisers typically combine ad-supported streaming with traditional TV?

Many advertisers use ad-supported streaming to supplement traditional TV reach, particularly to reach younger viewers who have cut the cord. A common approach is maintaining traditional TV for older demographics and live sports while adding streaming for younger audience reach and targeting capabilities. Budget allocation is shifting toward streaming as viewership patterns shift, though traditional TV remains valuable for specific audiences and programming.

What creative best practices work for ad-supported streaming?

Effective ad-supported streaming creative should lead with value proposition to capture attention immediately, include clear branding throughout the spot (not just at the end), design visuals for big-screen viewing with clear text and bold imagery, leverage audio effectively since streaming is a sound-on environment, and end with a memorable call to action since streaming isn't clickable like web ads. AI-powered creative tools can generate streaming-ready commercials from existing business assets.

How does ad-supported streaming work for local businesses?

Local businesses can effectively reach ad-supported streaming viewers through geographic targeting. A local restaurant, healthcare provider, or retail store can target viewers within their service area (by radius, zip code, or DMA) rather than paying for nationwide reach. Combined with platforms like Adwave that offer low minimum budgets ($50), ad-supported streaming has become accessible for local business advertising that was historically limited to local broadcast or cable.

Supporting data

Additional statistics contextualizing ad-supported streaming viewership:

  • 72.4%: TV viewing time that is ad-supported (Nielsen)

  • 83%: U.S. adults who watch streaming services (Pew Research)

  • +43%: Ad-supported streaming viewing growth (2025)

  • 68%: Prime Video subscribers on ad-supported tier

  • 84 million: Tubi monthly active users

  • 85 million: Pluto TV monthly active users

  • 2.8%: Roku Channel share of total TV viewing

  • 45%+: Total streaming share of TV viewing

  • $50: Minimum budget to start CTV advertising on platforms like Adwave

Data sources:

Start reaching ad-supported viewers

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