HBO Max Dominates Q1 Subscription Adds, Total U.S. SVOD Subs Exceed 240M

Enjoying continued momentum from releasing new films in tandem with cinemas, HBO Max grabbed 14.4% of all new U.S. subscription video-on-demand customers, according to Kantar Entertainment on Demand data.

Amazon Prime Video was second, with 13.2%.

Paramount+ and Disney+ were nearly tied, at 11.8% and 11.6%, respectively, followed by Hulu (10.6%), Netflix (8.5%) and Discovery+ (7.7%).

HBO Max also attracted the largest share of new SVOD subs in Q4 2020, and has been among the top three gainers since its launch in May 2020.

In a quarter that saw the launch of Paramount+ and Discovery+, “it’s all the more impressive that HBO Max held onto the top spot in share of new SVOD subscribers,” Kantar points out.

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In addition, HBO Max has seen its Net Promoter Score, a measure of subscriber advocacy, rise from 10th to second place since launch.

“This bodes well for both retention and word-of-mouth recommendation to drive future subscriber acquisition,” says Kantar, noting that subscribers specifically cite the number of new release films as a key catalyst to their increased satisfaction with the HBO Max service.

Paramount+ also showed strength, winning more than one in 10 new SVOD subscribers in the period, while Discovery+’s share was substantial given its “narrower focus on documentary and reality-based content,” says the report.

More than two-thirds (68%) of subscribers to Discovery+, launched on Jan. 4, cited the service’s ubiquitous promotional campaign as a key driver, while 40% cited free trial offers.

Disney+’s continued U.S. growth was helped by “WandaVision” and “The Mandalorian — the two highest-rated titles across the U.S. during the quarter.

Disney+ also saw net consumer satisfaction levels around the amount of original content it offers — a key measure for long-term retention — rise from +20% in Q1 2020 to +33% in Q1 2021.

Overall, more than 7% of U.S. households signed up for a new SVOD subscription in Q1, bringing total estimated U.S. SVOD subs to 241 million.

The average number of SVOD subs per U.S. household was 3.8 — up from 3.3 a year ago.

However, the number of households planning to cancel at least one such sub in the next three months also rose, to 24.9% — up from 20.5% a year ago.

Kantar’s data also confirms accelerating growth of users of ad-supported streaming services, led by the Peacock free tier and Tubi. And this research finds nearly half (49%) of Americans agreeing that they don’t mind seeing some advertising if it makes video streaming services cheaper.

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