SVOD Rates Soar, Netflix Leads Rivals

Now 41% of U.S. homes have access to subscription video-on-demand services -- up from 36% a year ago.

Nielsen also found that around one third -- 35.2% -- have high-speed internet access but no SVOD; and 24.5% have no broadband. Thirty-six percent have access to Netflix; 13% to Amazon Prime; and 6.5% to Hulu Plus.

Homes with SVOD generally have a higher income than those who don’t -- with the median income of around $74,900 a year. Those with no broadband have a median income of $24,200 a year.

SVOD homes also have more inclined to be higher tech TV homes: 95% have a HD TV; 65% have a video game console; and 65% have a tablet.

SVOD have higher daily on-screen time -- two hours and 45 minutes. This versus the average TV home at 1:57; homes with broadband but no SVOD, 1:29; and those homes with no broadband, 1:21.

In the fourth quarter of 2014, the average time spent per day for an adult 18+ for all screen use grew, with the chief gains coming from smartphones, gaming consoles, general Internet use and multimedia devices. Use of live TV time declined.

advertisement

advertisement

Next story loading loading..