Over-the-air TV market continues to shrink

About 289 million people own at least one television set, with the majority (119 million) owning four sets.

The Nielsen numbers are certain to cause a dispute with the NAB, which has insisted the amount of over-the-air viewing is increasing in an era of cord-cutting. 

Nielsen’s “The Media Universe” report is a summary of media usage in the second quarter of 2012 and is a consolidation of more than a dozen Nielsen reports issued throughout the year.

Free, over-the-air television viewing of broadcast TV signals are now watched by only 9 percent of the U.S. population — down from 16 percent in 2003, according to Nielsen, the major TV and radio rating service.

Eighty-five percent of U.S. consumers subscribe to pay TV, Nielsen reported, with digital cable having 52 percent and satellite 33 percent of the subscriptions. The new figures are in Nielsen’s “The Media Universe” report.

The decline in over-the-air broadcasting joined feature phones and VCRs as fading technologies. Nielsen said on a daily basis, viewers watch about six hours and 54 minutes of “traditional” TV, while the next most popular method of is viewing video over the Internet through a computer. Viewers watched video on computers 28 hours and 29 minutes each month.

About 289 million people own at least one television set, with the majority (119 million) owning four sets, Nielsen found. About 31 million own a single TV set. Seventy-five percent own an HDTV set and 86 percent own a DVD player, the report found.

The Nielsen numbers are certain to cause a dispute with the NAB, which has insisted the amount of over-the-air viewing is increasing in an era of cord-cutting. Last summer, the NAB produced a survey by Knowledge Networks citing about 18 percent as “broadcast exclusive” households. That total was 54 million Americans — up from 46 million in 2011.

Nielsen’s “The Media Universe” report is a summary of media usage in the second quarter of 2012 and is a consolidation of more than a dozen Nielsen reports issued throughout the year.

Discuss this Article 3

Anonymous (not verified)
on Jan 21, 2013

Uh...9 Percent Watch OTA and 85 Percent Watch via Cable/Satellite. 9+85=94%. What about the Remaining 6% Not Accounted For? I thought Nielsen's Businees was Numbers. Are those numbers valid (or skewed, perhaps)?

Eric Norberg (not verified)
on Jan 21, 2013

Looks like Neilsen is just counting subscriptions and Internet behavior and not counting broadcast viewing from those who have cable or satellite subscriptions. In our house, where we subscribe to both satellite services and have bluray players and Internet access, the appearance of such broadcast digital channels as MeTV and Antenna TV have caused my wife to sharply increase her over-the-air viewing I've noticed.

Anonymous (not verified)
on Feb 11, 2013

In 2005, I dropped DirectTV and dropped Cable as well. I was so impressed with the broad number of stations avaialble on TV from the start. Now FOX has purchased parts of channel-22 to focus on the spanish speakers. And everytime that I talk to someone about this over-the-air TV, they ask me how can they get hooked up. It would seem from my perspective that people are just rediscoverying TV.

Post new comment
Sign In or register to use your Broadcast Engineering ID
(optional)

Ads by Google

Watch Broadcast Engineering at NAB

Read the NAB blog for the latest show news

Why Go Digital

Newsletter Block - Editable

Subscribe to our newsletters and get regular updates on the technology that most interests you.

Download Smart Playout Center