Recent data from Ampere Analysis reveals that major streaming platforms in the US are deploying distinct advertising strategies based on content format, prioritizing immersion for movies while maximizing frequency for episodic series.
This divergence is clearly illustrated by the fact that movies carry 40% less advertising per hour than typical TV series. On average, episodic content includes over five minutes of ads per hour, whereas movies maintain a lighter load of approximately three minutes.
The gap in viewer experience is equally significant; movie audiences enjoy an average of 36 minutes of uninterrupted viewing between breaks, while TV viewers encounter advertisements roughly every 14 minutes. Despite this difference in frequency, the duration of individual ad breaks in streaming remains consistent across both formats, averaging just over one minute.
Among all major services, Paramount+ showed the most dramatic variance, with movie ad loads approximately 90% lower (ten times less) than those found in its TV programming. Industry analysts suggest that while TV series lend themselves to frequent breaks due to natural narrative cues, films rely on maintaining a cinematic flow, leading streamers to implement stricter advertising guardrails for their feature-length titles.
