24% of viewers pay attention to streaming ads
A survey of 1,000 U.S. adults by All About Cookies found that only 24% pay attention to streaming ads, with 52% having considered cancelling a service due to ads. Additionally, 67% prefer one long ad break upfront over multiple short breaks, and most subscribers to ad-supported tiers feel there are too many ads across platforms like Hulu and Peacock.
Key Takeaways
- Netflix is the only major service where a majority of subscribers, 52%, pay for an ad-free account.
- On Hulu, 71% of users said there are too many ads; Peacock followed at 68%.
- 74% of respondents said they look at their phone during streaming ad breaks, while 32% mute the ad.
- 67% of viewers preferred one long ad break at the start over multiple short breaks in the middle.
Why It Matters
The immediate signal is that streaming ads are often getting ignored rather than watched: just 24% of respondents said they pay attention, and 52% have considered cancelling a service because of ad load. That creates a clear friction point for ad-supported tiers across major platforms including Hulu, Peacock, Netflix, HBO Max, Amazon Prime Video, and Paramount+. The strongest format preference in the survey was a single long ad break upfront, chosen by 67% of respondents. The next data point to watch is whether platforms keep shifting ad placement or cadence in response to that 67% preference and the 52% churn risk.
Read full article at allaboutcookies.org