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Nielsen: NFL Ups Paramount+, Prime Video, Peacock October Monthly Viewing

Nielsen: NFL Ups Paramount+, Prime Video, Peacock October Monthly Viewing

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The National Football League, the world’s most-lucrative sports league, had an outsized impact on television viewing (and streaming) in October, according to new data from Nielsen.

The NFL is simultaneously driving a massive resurgence in broadcast viewing (up 4.3% from September) and propelling gains for key streaming services, distinguishing itself as the irrefutable multiplatform catalyst of the fall TV season.

The impact of NFL coverage in October was most apparent when isolating viewership by day: Sundays exhibited the largest viewing shift across distribution channels for the month, as broadcast averaged a 5.3-point gain to climb from an average of 22% of TV Monday through Saturday, to 27.3% of TV on Sundays.

By contrast, cable and streaming viewership experienced the opposite effect, with watch-time up slightly Monday-Saturday and noticeably lower on Sundays.

October Total Monday – Saturday Sunday Only Share Difference

Streaming 45.7% 45.9% 44.6% -1.3

Broadcast 22.9% 22.0% 27.3% 5.3

Cable 22.2% 22.7% 20.0% -2.7

While streaming continued to dominate overall household TV market share (47.5%), several streaming services benefited from NFL-driven increases in October, both on game days and overall:

Peacock exhibited a 19% monthly viewing uptick in October and represented 1.6% of TV. Peacock’s share on Sundays, however, averaged 2% of total TV.

Paramount+ viewership was up 8% in total versus last month, and the streamer’s average share of TV increased from 1.2% during Monday-Saturday, to 1.6% on Sundays.

Prime Video, home of NFL Thursday Night Football, gained 3-points against its monthly average on game days, jumping to 6.4% of TV on Thursdays in October.

YouTube and Netflix continued to lead the streaming market with 12.9% and 8% market share, respectively.

Broadcast led all TV categories with a 4.3% monthly viewing gain in October, which resulted in 0.6 additional share points and 22.9% of television—building on its lead over cable and marking its largest share of TV since November 2024 (23.7%).

Despite a robust month, broadcast sports viewership was down compared to September (-6.4%) but still accounted for nearly a third of all broadcast viewing.

NFL games on CBS, Fox and NBC claimed the top three overall program rankings with over 20 million viewers apiece. The fall TV season continued to unfold in October as well, as broadcast drama viewership saw a 28% increase over September led by “Tracker,” “Matlock” and “NCIS” on CBS, “High Potential” on ABC, and “Chicago Fire” on NBC, to represent the largest monthly gain within the category.

Streaming viewership was up 2.4% month-over-month, outpacing the increase in overall TV usage (+1.3%) to gain a half-point and represent 45.7% of TV watch-time in October.

This growth was primarily fueled by the aforementioned surge in football viewing across key streaming platforms, and while most non-NFL streamers saw decreases on game days, Netflix bucked the trend and grew its share of TV on Sundays.

Netflix netted out with 7.9% of TV in October, but on Sundays specifically, its share climbed to 8.2% of TV. This was partially on the strength of its original series “Monster: The Ed Gein Story,” which was the most-streamed title of the month with 5.4 billion minutes viewed.

Cable watch-time in October tracked closely with overall usage (+1.2%), but the category’s share of TV slipped 0.1-point due to rounding to finish with 22.2% of total TV. Cable sports viewership increased nearly 50% versus September and represented 14% of the category’s viewing total. Feature films were a bright spot for cable this month, exhibiting a 7% monthly increase as viewers sought out their favorite spooky movies amid the Halloween season. Cable news continued to lead cable viewing and owned nearly a quarter of the category’s share despite a 3% drop from last month.

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