DVD & Blu-ray Sales Have Dropped 90% Since 2014 As Streaming Grows


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As streaming dominates home entertainment, with 59.6 million U.S. households cutting the cord per Evoca.tv, the physical media market for DVDs and Blu-rays has seen a dramatic fall over the past decade. New data reveals that combined DVD and Blu-ray sales in the U.S. dropped from $10.1 billion in 2014 to an estimated $900 million in 2024, a decline of over 91%. While boutique collectors and hits like Oppenheimer keep Ultra HD Blu-ray afloat, the broader market’s collapse reflects a shift to digital platforms, leaving physical discs a niche relic.

A Decade of Decline: Year-by-Year Breakdown

The Digital Entertainment Group (DEG) and industry reports, including FlatpanelsHD and Variety, provide a clear picture of the physical media market’s trajectory. Below is a summary of estimated U.S. DVD and Blu-ray sales (including sell-through and rentals) from 2014 to 2024, adjusted for inflation where noted:

  • 2014: $10.1 billion – The market thrived pre-streaming boom, with DVDs holding 57.9% of sales and Blu-rays gaining traction. Blockbusters like Frozen drove $500 million per title.
  • 2015: $8.9 billion – Streaming’s rise, led by Netflix’s 70 million subscribers, cut sales by 12%. Blu-ray grew to 40% of units.
  • 2016: $7.6 billion – Blu-ray briefly surpassed DVDs at 51% of sales, per Gitnux, but total revenue fell 15% as Amazon Prime Video expanded.
  • 2017: $6.2 billion – Digital downloads overtook physical sales, with iTunes and Vudu up 20%. Physical dropped 18%.
  • 2018: $4.7 billion – A 24% decline hit as Disney+ prepped its 2019 launch. DVDs fell to 60% of units.
  • 2019: $2.77 billion – Down 41%, with Walmart (45%) and Amazon (23%) dominating retail, per Worldmetrics. Avengers: Endgame led sales.
  • 2020: $1.85 billion – COVID lockdowns boosted streaming; physical sales crashed 33%. DVDs held 63% of units, Blu-ray 37%.
  • 2021: $2.1 billion – A slight rebound (+14%) from theatrical releases like No Way Home, but still down 24% from 2019.
  • 2022: $1.6 billion – A 20% drop, with UHD Blu-ray up 20% for hits like Top Gun: Maverick. Rentals fell to $502 million.
  • 2023: $1.36 billion – Down 16%, with Avatar: The Way of Water topping DVDs ($6.63 million), per Statista. Rentals hit $225 million.
  • 2024: ~$900 million (est.) – Projected to dip below $1 billion, a 34% drop, driven by Best Buy’s exit and Target’s reduced stock. UHD Blu-ray rose to 16.2% of units, per Statista.

Chart: DVD and Blu-ray Sales Revenue (2014-2024)

YearRevenue ($ Billion)
201410.1
20158.9
20167.6
20176.2
20184.7
20192.77
20201.85
20212.1
20221.6
20231.36
20240.9 (est.)

Note: 2024 is an estimate based on Variety’s projection and DEG trends. Data combines DVD, Blu-ray, and UHD Blu-ray sales/rentals unless specified.

Why the Collapse?

Streaming’s dominance—Netflix hit 300 million subscribers in 2024—shifted consumer habits, with 85% of U.S. homes using devices like Fire TV, per Deloitte 2025. Digital sales ($2.98 billion) outpaced physical ($1.85 billion) by 2020, per FlatpanelsHD. Retail exits hurt: Best Buy stopped DVD sales in 2024, Target slashed shelves, and Netflix ended rentals in 2023. Rising disc prices—$44.06 average in April 2024, per Statista—deterred casual buyers, though collectors snapped up 4K titles like Deadpool & Wolverine, which led 2024’s charts.

A Niche Revival?

Despite the downturn, Ultra HD Blu-ray grew to 16.2% of units in 2023, up from 5.3% in 2018, driven by films like Oppenheimer (15% Q4 spike), per FlatpanelsHD.

Looking Ahead

With the growth of streaming, the role of physical media shrinks. The $900 million market in 2024 is a far cry from 2014’s $10.1 billion, and 2025 may see further erosion as Walmart and Amazon focus digital. Yet, for collectors, Blu-ray’s crisp visuals keep the flame alive—just don’t expect a blockbuster revival.

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