How much video do people really watch? This report compiles 60+ statistics on global video consumption habits, platform usage, mobile viewing trends, and demographic breakdowns — every data point individually sourced and updated monthly.
I started StreamRecorder.io after spending years in the video streaming space, talking with creators, streamers, and remote teams who were always frustrated that losing important videos had basically become a normal way of working. I’ve worked directly with people who live inside the world of online video every single day, and I care a hell of a lot more about helping them hit “record” at the right moment than chasing buzzwords or the next passing trend in our industry.
I know the frustration first hand, having forgotten to hit record myself and missing strategy meetings or seminars and trainings that never offered a recording later. That’s exactly what motivated me to build StreamRecorder.io.
The statistics I provided below are a collection of what I believe is to be the best current data on online video consumption over a variation of platforms. The data breaks down nicely on how many hours people spend watching videos each week, how people split that time between the sort of go-to platforms, and how these habits differ by a person’s age. I would recommend that you use this page as a reference whether you’re planning content, pitching a client, or trying to prove to your co-workers, friends or even family that yes, people really do spend double-digit hours a week watching videos online.
Online video has become the dominant form of media consumption worldwide. From streaming services to social platforms, video content now accounts for the majority of internet traffic and screen time.
The shift to video-first internet usage has been gradual but decisive. In 2015, video accounted for roughly 70% of consumer internet traffic. By 2020, that figure had climbed to 82%. Today, the question isn't whether people watch video online — it's how much of their day is spent doing so.
What's particularly striking is the universality of this behavior. Video consumption isn't limited to younger demographics or tech-savvy early adopters. Across age groups, income levels, and geographies, online video has become as routine as checking email or browsing social media. For marketers, educators, and content creators, understanding these consumption patterns is no longer optional — it's foundational to reaching any audience at scale.
Nearly everyone online is watching video content on a regular basis, from music videos and tutorials to influencer content and gaming streams. Video has become as fundamental to internet usage as web browsing itself.
YouTube remains the dominant video platform globally, but TikTok's rapid growth and Netflix's streaming dominance have reshaped how audiences consume video content across different contexts.
The video platform landscape in 2026 is defined by three distinct consumption modes: lean-back streaming (Netflix, Disney+), active discovery (YouTube, TikTok), and social viewing (Instagram Reels, Facebook Video). Each serves a different user intent, and the most successful platforms have learned to blend these modes rather than compete head-to-head.
YouTube's enduring dominance is often underestimated. While TikTok captures headlines for its growth rate, YouTube still commands nearly 50% more monthly active users and generates significantly more watch time per session. The platform's secret is versatility: it serves as a search engine, entertainment hub, educational resource, and music streaming service simultaneously. TikTok, by contrast, has perfected the art of passive discovery — users don't come looking for specific content; they come to be surprised.
| Platform | Monthly Active Users | Daily Time Spent | YoY Growth |
|---|---|---|---|
| YouTube | 2.7B | 49 minutes | 2.1% |
| TikTok | 1.9B | 52–58 minutes | 17.6% |
| Netflix | 302M | 63 minutes | 7.2% |
| Instagram (Reels) | 2.0B | 35 minutes | 5.7% |
The revenue gap tells an equally important story. YouTube's $36 billion in annual ad revenue dwarfs TikTok's earnings, despite TikTok's higher engagement rates. This reflects YouTube's mature advertiser ecosystem and its dominance in longer-form content where mid-roll ads generate premium CPMs. For creators, this translates to meaningful monetization differences: a million views on YouTube can yield $3,000–5,000, while the same views on TikTok typically generate a fraction of that through the Creator Fund.
Perhaps the most significant shift of the past two years is YouTube's migration to the living room. With 52% of US YouTube viewing now happening on TV screens, the platform has effectively become a cable replacement for many households — a transition that has profound implications for advertisers accustomed to thinking of YouTube as a "second screen" experience.
Mobile devices have become the primary screen for video consumption globally. With faster networks and larger smartphone screens, more than three-quarters of all video is now watched on mobile.
The mobile video revolution wasn't driven by any single factor — it emerged from the convergence of several forces: unlimited data plans becoming standard, 5G networks reducing buffering to near-zero, smartphone screens growing to 6.5+ inches, and platforms optimizing aggressively for vertical viewing. The result is a fundamental rewiring of viewing habits.
What's particularly notable is how this shift has changed when people watch video, not just where. Mobile video fills the interstitial moments of the day — commutes, lunch breaks, waiting rooms, the minutes before sleep. This "snacking" behavior favors short-form content but hasn't eliminated appetite for longer videos; instead, it's expanded total viewing time by capturing previously unused moments.
Smartphones have overtaken desktops, laptops, and even smart TVs as the primary device for watching video content. This mobile-first shift is driving the popularity of vertical video formats and short-form content.
The vertical video format has been the most visible manifestation of mobile-first viewing. When TikTok proved that full-screen vertical content could sustain engagement for hours, every major platform followed: YouTube Shorts, Instagram Reels, and even Netflix began experimenting with mobile-optimized previews. For creators, this means rethinking composition entirely — the rule of thirds gives way to center-weighted framing, and horizontal b-roll becomes nearly unusable.
Regional differences in mobile viewing are stark and often surprising. In Thailand, 72% of video viewing happens on mobile; in the United States, it's 41%. This gap reflects infrastructure differences (mobile-first markets vs. established broadband), cultural factors (shared TV viewing vs. individual screens), and content preferences (short social content vs. long-form streaming). Brands operating globally must design for both paradigms.
Video consumption patterns vary significantly by age, with Gen Z and Millennials leading in both volume and platform diversity. However, older demographics are increasingly adopting online video habits.
The generational divide in video consumption is narrowing faster than most assume. While Gen Z spends the most time with video content, the gap with older generations has shrunk dramatically since 2020. More than half of adults over 45 now consume online video regularly — a threshold that seemed distant just five years ago. The pandemic accelerated this adoption, and the habits stuck.
What separates generations isn't the amount of video they watch but how they find it. Gen Z relies almost entirely on algorithmic discovery — TikTok's For You page, YouTube's recommendations, Instagram's Explore tab. Older viewers are more likely to navigate directly to known channels or search for specific content. This has profound implications for content strategy: reaching Gen Z requires optimizing for the algorithm, while reaching Boomers requires building direct audience relationships.
Short-form video has exploded in popularity, but long-form content remains strong for education, entertainment, and deep engagement. Music videos continue to dominate overall viewership.
The "short vs. long" framing misses what's actually happening. Audiences aren't choosing one or the other — they're consuming both, often on the same platform, sometimes in the same session. A user might scroll TikTok for 20 minutes of short clips, then switch to YouTube for an hour-long documentary. The formats serve different psychological needs: short-form for novelty and stimulation, long-form for depth and immersion.
The data on completion rates reveals a counterintuitive truth: longer videos get watched more completely. Videos over 60 minutes achieve a 58% play rate versus just 23% for videos under one minute. This isn't because short videos are worse — it's because users self-select. Someone who clicks on a 90-minute video has intent; someone served a 15-second clip may have just been scrolling. For creators, the lesson is clear: length should match intent, not arbitrary platform norms.
Video consumption patterns vary dramatically by region. Asia leads in mobile-first viewing, while North America shows the highest adoption of connected TV streaming.
Regional video consumption patterns reflect decades of infrastructure development, cultural norms, and platform availability. India's position as YouTube's largest market (491 million users) stems from a combination of affordable mobile data, limited broadband penetration, and YouTube's early localization efforts. Indonesia's TikTok dominance follows a similar mobile-first trajectory. In contrast, North American and European markets show more balanced device usage, with connected TVs and smart speakers expanding the viewing ecosystem beyond phones and computers.
The absence of certain platforms from specific markets creates distinctive consumption landscapes. TikTok's ban in India (since 2020) left a gap that YouTube Shorts and Instagram Reels have partially filled, but no single platform has replicated TikTok's engagement intensity. In China, the domestic ecosystem — Douyin, Bilibili, Kuaishou — operates on entirely different dynamics, with live commerce and super-app integration playing roles that barely exist in Western markets.
| Country | YouTube Users | TikTok Users | Key Trend |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 253M | 136M | TV streaming dominates (52% on big screens) |
| India | 491M | — | Largest YouTube market globally |
| Indonesia | 143M | 108M | #1 TikTok market, mobile-first |
| Brazil | 144M | 92M | Fast-growing streaming adoption |
Latin America represents one of the most dynamic video markets globally. Netflix captures nearly half of all SVOD revenue in the region, driven by aggressive investment in Spanish-language original content. YouTube's penetration is equally strong, with Brazil ranking as the platform's third-largest market worldwide. The region's relatively young population and high mobile penetration suggest growth will continue outpacing mature markets.
For global brands and creators, these regional variations demand localized strategies. A video optimized for US audiences — landscape format, designed for TV viewing, English-language — will underperform in Southeast Asian markets where vertical, mobile-first, and vernacular content dominates. Understanding these distinctions is essential for anyone attempting to build international reach.
The data paints a clear picture: online video isn't just popular — it's the dominant mode of content consumption for the majority of internet users worldwide. With 91.8% of users watching video weekly and the average person spending 17 hours per week with video content, we've moved well beyond the "video is the future" narrative. Video is the present.
Three trends stand out as particularly significant for the year ahead. First, the mobile-TV split is stabilizing into distinct use cases rather than one format winning. Mobile dominates discovery and short-form; TVs dominate lean-back streaming. Successful content strategies will need to serve both contexts. Second, algorithmic discovery continues to gain ground over intentional search, especially among younger audiences. Platforms that master recommendation engines will capture disproportionate attention. Third, regional fragmentation is accelerating. The era of global platform dominance may be giving way to a more complex landscape where local players and regional content preferences carry more weight.
For businesses, creators, and researchers, these statistics underscore a simple truth: video literacy is no longer optional. Understanding how audiences consume video — not just how much, but on which devices, in which formats, through which discovery mechanisms — is essential to reaching anyone at scale in 2026.
This report compiles statistics from primary sources including Statista, DataReportal, Cisco, Ericsson, official company disclosures (YouTube, TikTok, Netflix), and industry research firms (Omdia, eMarketer, Wyzowl). Each statistic is individually cited with a direct link to its source. Data is reviewed and updated monthly. When sources report conflicting figures, we prioritize official company disclosures, then primary research firms, then aggregated industry reports. All statistics reflect the most recent data available as of the publication date.