Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

In The News

Parks Associates: Prime Video is most-used streaming service in U.S.

For the third consecutive year, Amazon’s Prime Video has outranked its competitors as the most-used streaming service in the United States, according to a report released by Parks Associates on Tuesday.

The report is part of the research firm’s Streaming Video Tracker, which will be detailed at the company’s Future of Video conference in Southern California later this month.

Prime Video has topped Parks Associates’ report of the most-used streaming service since 2022, when it leapfrogged former first place contender Netflix, which has been in second place ever since. 

The report released on Tuesday only evaluated subscription-based services — it didn’t include free, ad-supported platforms like Paramount’s Pluto TV, Fox Corporation’s Tubi or the non-premium version of Google-owned YouTube.

That said, ad-supported services are growing in popularity, and subscribers are increasingly choosing ad-inclusive plans in order to save costs, the Parks Associates research report indicated.The firm estimated around 88 percent of U.S. households subscribe to a streaming service, and 42 percent of those are using ad-based products, which it said will create “incredible competition for subscription streaming services.”

Jennifer Kent, the Vice President of Research at Parks Associates, noted that Showtime was knocked out of the ranking in part because Paramount rolled the brand into its Paramount Plus streaming service; the linear multiplex network and the premium version of the streaming service are now marketed as Paramount Plus with Showtime.

Coincidentally, Parks Associates released its report just a few hours before Amazon confirmed a long-time rumor that it will sunset its free, ad-supported streaming TV (FAST) brand Freevee and move the platform’s content library into Prime Video.

“Tracking the changes at the top of the market over the past five years reveals the extent of rebranding and consolidation shaping this market,” Kent said. After noting the changes at Showtime, she continued: “We expect to see more premium content used to differentiate subscription tiers or create content bundles, giving consumers choice in how to build their packages.”

Among some of the less-dominant but still growing services, Parks Associates affirmed Peacock is still not profitable for Comcast, but said the company’s inclusion of top-tier sports programming like the 2024 Summer Olympic Games and simulcasts of NBC’s Sunday Night Football is helping it grow.

Apple, meanwhile, has lagged behind some of its peers, Parks Associates affirmed. Despite finding early success with shows like “Ted Lasso” (produced by Warner Bros) and “Severance,” streamers still aren’t flocking to Apple TV Plus, especially when their generous free trials offered through the purchase of certain Apple devices expire. 

That might change over time, Parks Associates noted, because Apple has signaled their willingness to reach potential subscribers independent of the Apple ecosystem.

From the article, "Parks Associates: Prime Video is most-used streaming service in U.S." by Matthew Keys

Previously In The News

Gear Up for a Flood of IoT Support Requests

Growth of the Internet of Things in broadband households extends the life, utility and functionality of all connected solutions in the home. It also puts new pressures on existing support solutions to...

Apple, Hollywood Honchos Put Heads Together

The Apple TV came in fourth, behind Amazon's Fire TV, Google's second-place Chromecast and Roku's pack-leading set-top devices, in Parks Associates' tally of streaming device sales in 2014. Amazon and...

Trust and Value Will Bring IoT Home

The connected car and smart home markets are both at an early stage of development, but in many ways they have been growing in parallel. Both markets are enabled by the falling costs of sensors, netwo...

T-Mobile partners with Sling for unlimited video that won't tap data

Watching video on mobile devices has grown in popularity, but two-thirds of consumers still view most of their TV shows on a TV, according to market researcher Parks Associates. "When you look at m...