Revenues of selected hybrid video-on-demand (HVOD) services worldwide in 2029, by plan type
Hybrid video-on-demand (HVOD) has emerged as the dominant streaming business model. Between 2022 and 2024, every major streaming service -- Netflix, Disney+, Amazon Prime Video, Max, Peacock, and Paramount+ -- launched or expanded advertising-supported tiers. The result is a new revenue architecture where each service generates income from two sources simultaneously: subscription fees from all paying subscribers (both ad and ad-free tiers) and advertising revenue from the ad-supported tier's inventory. The global SVOD subscriber landscape driving these projections is in our global SVOD subscriber count by platform analysis.
By 2029, the HVOD market is projected to reach $161.7 billion in combined subscription and advertising revenue. This represents approximately 3x growth from the 2024 total of approximately $52-55 billion across the same services. The acceleration is driven by advertising revenue growing faster than subscription revenue as ad-tier scale approaches subscription-tier scale in several markets. The content investment required to sustain this growth is in our media content spending analysis.
In 2023, advertising represented approximately 15% of total HVOD revenue across major services. By 2029, advertising reaches 29.4% -- nearly doubling its share. This reflects three simultaneous forces: ad-tier subscriber bases scaling to 100-200M+ per service, streaming CPMs rising toward traditional TV levels ($30-45 in premium markets), and live sports content (NFL, NBA, Champions League on streaming) commanding TV-equivalent advertising rates. Amazon Prime Video has the highest ad revenue ratio at 40.9% of its total HVOD revenue, reflecting its unique e-commerce targeting advantage. The ad-supported subscriber context is in our ad-supported VOD worldwide analysis.
HVOD total revenue by service 2029 -- Netflix $62.7B leads, Amazon $31.3B second
The bar chart below shows total projected HVOD revenue (subscription + advertising combined) by service in 2029. Netflix's $62.7 billion total represents 38.8% of all HVOD revenue -- a dominant position maintained by global scale (325M+ subscribers in 2025, estimated 380M+ by 2029) and the fastest-growing ad tier. Disney+ pricing and revenue structure is in our Disney streaming subscription prices analysis.
Subscription vs advertising revenue by HVOD service -- 2029 side-by-side comparison
The grouped bar chart below compares subscription and advertising revenue for each major HVOD service in 2029. Netflix leads both categories. Amazon Prime Video's advertising revenue ($12.8B) is notable -- second only to Netflix despite Amazon's smaller subscription revenue base -- reflecting its premium CPM rates from e-commerce targeting data. Disney+ revenue breakdown context in our DTC segment financial analysis.
HVOD global revenue mix 2029 -- 70.6% subscription, 29.4% advertising
Global HVOD market revenue growth 2022 to 2029 -- subscription and advertising trajectories
The line chart below tracks total HVOD market revenue from 2022 (when ad tiers began launching at scale) through 2029. Advertising revenue grows significantly faster than subscription revenue -- expanding from approximately $4 billion across all services in 2022 to $47.5 billion in 2029, a 12x increase in seven years. Disney ARPU trajectory reflecting this shift in our Disney Plus ARPU worldwide quarterly analysis.
HVOD advertising revenue by service 2029 -- Netflix $14.2B, Amazon $12.8B lead
The horizontal bars below rank each HVOD service by projected advertising revenue in 2029. Amazon Prime Video's $12.8 billion is a particularly notable projection -- larger than Disney+, Max, Hulu, Peacock, and Paramount+ combined -- reflecting Amazon's unique ability to target audiences based on purchase intent and shopping data. This delivers CPM premiums of 30-50% versus other streaming advertisers. U.S. TV time share context in our U.S. TV usage share by company analysis.
Advertising as % of total HVOD revenue -- Amazon 40.9% leads, Netflix 22.6%
The chart below shows advertising revenue as a percentage of each service's total 2029 HVOD revenue. Amazon Prime Video leads at 40.9% -- its e-commerce data makes its ad inventory significantly more valuable per impression. Netflix at 22.6% has the lowest ad share ratio despite having the highest absolute ad revenue -- reflecting its dominant subscription base keeping the denominator large. Disney+ streaming subscription pricing context in our Disney streaming subscription prices analysis.
HVOD revenue by service -- Amazon $31.3B, Disney+ $22B, Max $17.3B, Hulu $12.7B
- Amazon Prime Video ($31.3B -- $18.5B sub + $12.8B ad): Second-largest HVOD service. Amazon introduced ads to Prime Video in January 2024, immediately becoming one of the most valuable streaming ad inventories due to purchase-intent targeting. By 2029, Amazon's e-commerce data advantage is expected to sustain the highest CPMs in streaming ($35-50) driving $12.8B in ad revenue despite a smaller subscriber base than Netflix. Subscriber context in our Disney Plus subscriber count worldwide analysis.
- Disney+ ($22.0B -- $16.2B sub + $5.8B ad): Third-largest HVOD service in 2029. Disney+ ad tier launched December 2022. By 2029, Disney's combined DTC (Disney+, Hulu, ESPN+) represents approximately $45B+ in total revenue. Disney+ standalone HVOD figure excludes Hulu. Subscription pricing driving ARPU in our Disney Plus ARPU worldwide analysis.
- Max/HBO ($17.3B -- $12.8B sub + $4.5B ad): Fourth-largest. Warner Bros. Discovery's Max has the highest subscription revenue per subscriber ratio -- reflecting HBO Premium's premium pricing and lower ad-tier penetration relative to rivals. Max ad tier launched June 2023. 128M global subscribers Q3 2025 scaling to estimated 160M+ by 2029.
- Hulu ($12.7B -- $8.5B sub + $4.2B ad): Fifth-largest. Hulu has operated an ad-supported tier since its 2008 launch -- the longest-running HVOD operation of any major service. Hulu's advertising business is mature with established agency relationships and competitive CPMs. Hulu + Live TV's advertising is excluded from streaming-only figures. Disney+ pricing structure in our Disney streaming prices analysis.
- Peacock ($8.0B -- $4.2B sub + $3.8B ad): Sixth-largest. Peacock has the highest ad-to-subscription ratio (47.5%) of any major HVOD service, reflecting its AVOD-first roots -- Peacock Free exists as a pure AVOD tier with no subscription fee. NBCUniversal's NBC broadcast and Telemundo audiences extend Peacock's advertising reach. Subscriber context in our Disney Plus subscribers U.S. analysis.
- Paramount+ ($7.7B -- $5.5B sub + $2.2B ad): Seventh. Smallest of the major HVOD services by revenue. Paramount+ Essential (with ads) at $7.99/month is the primary driver of subscriber growth under CEO David Ellison post-Skydance merger. Committed to $1.5B content investment increase in 2026. U.S. TV time share tracking in our U.S. TV usage share by company analysis.
HVOD revenue by service and plan type -- complete data table 2029
| Service | Total Revenue ($B) | Subscription ($B) | Advertising ($B) | Ad Share (%) | HVOD Share (%) | Ad Tier Launched |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Netflix | $62.7B | $48.5B | $14.2B | 22.6% | 38.8% | Nov 2022 |
| Amazon Prime Video | $31.3B | $18.5B | $12.8B | 40.9% | 19.4% | Jan 2024 |
| Disney+ | $22.0B | $16.2B | $5.8B | 26.4% | 13.6% | Dec 2022 |
| Max (HBO/WBD) | $17.3B | $12.8B | $4.5B | 26.0% | 10.7% | Jun 2023 |
| Hulu | $12.7B | $8.5B | $4.2B | 33.1% | 7.9% | 2008 (original) |
| Peacock | $8.0B | $4.2B | $3.8B | 47.5% | 4.9% | 2020 (AVOD-first) |
| Paramount+ | $7.7B | $5.5B | $2.2B | 28.6% | 4.8% | 2021 (P+ Essential) |
| TOTAL | $161.7B | $114.2B | $47.5B | 29.4% | 100% | -- |
HVOD revenue by plan type 2029 -- key statistics and facts
Frequently Asked Questions -- HVOD revenue by plan type 2029
HVOD (Hybrid Video-on-Demand) refers to streaming services that offer both a paid subscription tier and an advertising-supported tier simultaneously. Major HVOD services as of 2026: Netflix, Disney+, Amazon Prime Video, Hulu, Max/HBO, Peacock, and Paramount+. Apple TV+ is excluded from HVOD classification -- it remains SVOD-only with no ad tier. Pure AVOD/FAST services (Tubi, Pluto TV, Peacock Free) are also excluded as they have no subscription tier. The HVOD model is now the dominant structure for all major global streaming services.
The global HVOD market is projected to reach $161.7 billion in 2029 across the seven major services (Netflix, Amazon, Disney+, Hulu, Max, Peacock, Paramount+). This comprises $114.2 billion in subscription revenue (70.6%) and $47.5 billion in advertising revenue (29.4%). This represents approximately 3x growth from the estimated $52-55 billion total in 2024. Netflix accounts for $62.7 billion (38.8% of total). Source: BusinessStats Research estimates, Ampere Analysis and MoffettNathanson projection basis.
Netflix leads HVOD advertising revenue at $14.2 billion in 2029, reflecting its largest subscriber base and global ad-tier scale (estimated 200M+ ad-tier subscribers by 2029). Amazon Prime Video ranks second at $12.8 billion -- a larger share of its total revenue (40.9%) than Netflix (22.6%) -- due to its e-commerce purchase-intent targeting commanding 30-50% CPM premiums versus other streaming platforms. Disney+ is projected at $5.8 billion in ad revenue by 2029. Source: BusinessStats Research 2026.
Advertising represents 29.4% of total global HVOD revenue in 2029 ($47.5 billion of $161.7 billion), up from approximately 15% in 2023. By individual service: Amazon leads at 40.9% ad share, Peacock 47.5% (highest), Hulu 33.1%, Paramount+ 28.6%, Disney+ 26.4%, Max 26.0%, Netflix 22.6% (lowest, due to dominant subscription base). The growth from 15% to 29.4% in six years reflects massive scale-up of ad-tier subscriber bases and rising streaming CPMs. Source: BusinessStats Research 2026.
Yes -- HVOD is the fastest-growing streaming revenue model. Pure SVOD growth is maturing as subscriber penetration plateaus in key markets. HVOD benefits from two growth engines simultaneously: subscription revenue (from all paying subscribers) and advertising revenue (from ad-tier inventory). The HVOD advertising revenue component grows 12x from 2022 to 2029, significantly faster than subscription revenue (3x). This dual-revenue structure makes HVOD more resilient and more profitable than pure SVOD at scale. Source: BusinessStats Research 2026.
Amazon Prime Video's 40.9% advertising revenue share (second highest after Peacock) reflects Amazon's unique e-commerce first-party data advantage. When Amazon serves ads on Prime Video, it can target viewers based on their Amazon shopping history, purchase intent, browsing behaviour, and demographic data -- information that no other streaming service has. This enables Amazon to charge CPMs of $35-50 versus $15-25 for comparable inventory on other streamers, generating proportionally higher ad revenue per subscriber. Amazon introduced ads to Prime Video in January 2024. Source: BusinessStats Research 2026.
HVOD advertising revenue of $47.5 billion in 2029 compares to the global television advertising market of approximately $200+ billion annually. HVOD streaming advertising will represent approximately 20-25% of total global TV ad spending by 2029, up from approximately 5% in 2022. The key drivers of this share shift: streaming CPMs closing the gap to linear TV CPMs (now $25-40 versus linear TV's $40-60 in premium markets), streaming's deterministic audience targeting versus TV's panel-based measurement, and live sports content (NFL, NBA, Champions League) commanding TV-equivalent rates on streaming platforms. Source: BusinessStats Research 2026.
Key differences in HVOD revenue models: Subscription revenue is predictable and recurring -- collected monthly or annually from all paying subscribers regardless of viewing behaviour. Margin improves as subscriber scale grows against fixed content costs. Advertising revenue is variable -- dependent on viewing hours, CPMs, and ad load. It scales with engagement rather than subscriber count alone. A subscriber who watches 40 hours/month generates more ad revenue than one who watches 4 hours. The HVOD model captures both: subscriptions provide financial stability, advertising provides upside from highly engaged viewers. Disney's DTC financial performance in our DTC segment financial analysis.