Cord Cutters News

Study: 71% of TV Households Have a Pay-TV Service

As cord cutting continues to revolutionize the media landscape, a new study by Leichtman Research Group, Inc. finds that 71% of TV households nationwide have some form of pay-TV service (via cable, satellite, Telco, or Internet-delivered vMVPD).

The latest figure is an 11% decrease from 2016 (82%), which in turn was a decrease from 87% in 2011, and 86% in 2006. The LRG study details how the decline continues between different age groups that use a pay-TV service. 

In TV households, 64% of adults ages 18-44 and 77% of ages 45+ have a pay-TV service, which is a stark change from 2016, when 77% of adults ages 18-44 and 86% of ages 45+ had a pay-TV service.

Not only are viewing habits different between ages, but the LRG study shows a difference from recent movers. Of those that were surveyed, 41% of those that moved in the past year do not currently have a pay-TV service – a higher level than in previous years. The trend continued as viewing habits differed between renters and homeowners by a 10% difference —35% of renters do not have a pay-TV service compared to 25% of homeowners.

“The percent of U.S. TV households with a live pay-TV service significantly declined from 82% to 71% over the past five years,” said Bruce Leichtman, president and principal analyst for Leichtman Research Group, Inc. “The penetration of pay-TV remains lowest among younger adults and the categories that they tend to populate, including movers and renters.”

Other notable findings include:

Exit mobile version