
U.S. consumers’
consumption of most media — including paid streaming services — has declined over the past three months, although consumption of free streaming services is stable to slightly up.
That’s according to the latest surveys by consumer research platform Attest, conducted among a sample from its panel of 1,000 consumers who are nationally representative of working-age,
U.S.-based consumers. The surveys concluded on October 3, 2022 and January 3, 2023.
Asked about their daily viewing habits, the number indicating that they generally watch no paid video
streaming services increased rose by 2.8 percentage points -- from 12.3% in October to 15.1% in January (chart above).
Attest notes that inflation may be starting to affect paid streaming
services.
While those watching between one and two hours per day rose by 2 percentage points, those watching two to four hours declined by 1 percentage point and those watching more than four
hours declined by 3 points. In addition, those who say they watch such paid services less than 30 minutes per day rose slightly.
Meanwhile, those reporting that they watch no free streaming
services dipped by 1 point, from 34.4% in October to 33.2% in January.
And while those watching free streamers more than four hours declined by 2 points, those watching between one and two
hours rose by 2 points. Most of the other watch-time categories were more or less stable.
Attest also asked about consumption of leading specific video streaming services, although it did not
differentiate between the paid and free tiers of some of these services.
Asked which of 15 services they watch at least once per week, Netflix, Amazon Prime Video and Hulu retained their top
three positions, but saw their shares drop: Netflix from 70.1% in October to 68.3% in January, Prime Video from 47.3% to 46.8%, and Hulu from 47.2% to 42.6%.
Disney+ experienced the
biggest loss: down 5.4 percentage points, from 37.7% to 32.3%.
YouTube TV fell 3.9 points to 19.1%, and Apple TV+ declined 3.8 percentage points, to 12%.
Peacock was the
only service seeing a notable increase: up 3.4 percentage points, to 29.5%. Paramount held its own, edging up by less than a point.

Linear TV (termed “live TV” in the results) also
basically held its own. Just under 23% in both surveys reported that they watch none of this TV. Those watching from one to two hours, from two to four hours, and less than 30 minutes were all up
somewhat, while those watching for between 30 minutes and an hour and those watching more than four hours were down somewhat.
Looking at other media, Attest reports that daily usage of
some of the largest social media sites “plunged” in Q4. The number of daily users for Instagram dropped 8.7 points, to 33.7% Facebook was down 7 points, to 56%, and Snapchat was down 8.1
points, to 20.4%.
Even TikTok saw declines, with those reporting themselves to be daily users down 5.5 points, to 29.2%, and those using it at all down 6.9 points, to 61.1%.
The one platform showing growth was newcomer BeReal: Those reporting that they use it at all rose 12.5 points, to 27.7%.
Audio saw declines in daily listeners across radio, streamed
music and audiobooks. Declines in weekly listeners among five leading music streaming platforms bumped YouTube music back into first place, at 41%.
Subscribers to news media subscriptions were
essentially flat, at 39%, although the numbers visiting news websites or apps weekly fell 1.9 points, to 57.8%, and weekly readership of digital magazines declined 2.7 points, to 30.3%.
Weekly
readers of newspapers declined 5.6 points, to 26.5%, and weekly readers of print magazines declined 4.2 points, to 25.5%.