Providing Market Intelligence for 40 Years

In The News

The Education of Roku’s Anthony Wood

As viewers across America embraced streaming TV, the number of households watching TV on Roku-powered devices mushroomed from 9.2 million to 90 million between 2015 and 2024. Its platform revenue exploded from about $50 million to $3.5 billion annually over the same period.

But that growth phase is over: 84% of U.S. households now have internet-connected TVs, streaming dongles or internet-connected gaming consoles that let them watch streaming TV, according to research firm Parks Associates.

Roku, a pioneer of streaming devices, still has a leading market share, at least in the U.S., where its software powers nearly 25% of streaming devices, including TVs, up from 20% in 2020, according to Parks Associates.

Apple and Android have nearly 100% of the mobile operating system market; the top three streaming OS systems only had 65% market share in 2025, according to Parks Associates Data.

From the article, "The Education of Roku’s Anthony Wood" by Catherine Perloff

Previously In The News

Research: 38% US internet homes subscribe to sports streaming service

Parks Associates has published research revealing that 38 per cent of US internet households subscribe to at least one sports-specific streaming service, up from just 4 per cent in 2019. “Sports ha...

Streaming services reach 91% of U.S. households, Parks Associates reports

Streaming video continues to grow as the dominant method of home entertainment consumption in the United States, according to new data released by Parks Associates. The firm reports that 91% of U.S...

Fixed Wireless Capable of Providing MDUs With Gigabit Speeds: Report

A recent Parks Associates study showed that nearly one in five multifamily housing residents with home internet have access to gigabit or faster download speeds. The study — included in the whitepa...

Analysis: How free streaming is reshaping television’s future while viewers drown in choice

Parks Associates adds another layer to the picture, reporting that 45 percent of U.S. internet households now watch FAST services, a swift adoption for a category that barely existed five years ago....