Netflix’s bold bet on WWE has already paid dividends. In the streaming giant’s first full year carrying WWE programming, it says, subscribers watched a staggering 525 million hours of WWE content, proving live sports-entertainment can thrive on a global streamer. Notable WWE on Netflix accomplishments include:
- 525 million hours of WWE content were watched on Netflix in 2025.
- Monday Night Raw alone delivered ~340 million hours of viewing in that period — the lion’s share of the total.
- Raw averaged more than 3 million viewers weekly across the year and ranked in Netflix’s global Top 10 in 47 of 52 weeks.
- Premium Live Events (and other WWE programming) contributed the remainder of the hours (roughly 185 million hours), showing the broader WWE slate also resonated with subscribers.
- WWE content and cross-posting on Netflix-owned social channels generated billions of impressions, and WWE growth on social platforms surged during the year as Netflix amplified discoverability.
By plugging a global live-entertainment engine into its catalog, Netflix tacked on more than a weekly show in 2025. Those 525 million hours aren’t just eyeballs; they’re a signal flare that Netflix’s $5B bet on Raw and WWE IP is paying off. The partnership has expanded to make the streamer the U.S. home of WWE’s library (including the Big Four PLEs, pre-September 2025 windows), plus WWE originals and docs.
With the consistent, appointment-style viewing and social engagement boost, studies find that WWE content is reducing Netflix’s subscriber churn. Ampere’s research found that among U.S. users who signed up for Raw’s 2025 premiere on the platform, just 18.2% churned after 60 days. The study found that the share of WWE viewers with Netflix climbed sharply from 62% in Q3 2024 to 76% in Q1 2025.
Steady weekly audiences plus huge PLE spikes mean Netflix didn’t merely add WWE, it turned wrestling into a recurring streaming tentpole that boosts views, social reach, and subscriber value.

