-

Microdramas Overtake Streamers on Mobile Engagement, Says Omdia

LONDON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Microdramas are rapidly emerging as one of the fastest-scaling formats in online video. Omdia analysis of mobile usage data shows that in the US users now spend more time per day watching microdramas on mobile apps than they do watching Netflix, Disney+ or Amazon Prime Video on mobile devices.

“Microdramas are no longer a niche experiment. They are becoming a core driver of mobile video engagement,” said Maria Rua Aguete, Head of Media and Entertainment at Omdia speaking at MIP London.

Share

Omdia estimates global microdrama revenues reached $11 billion in 2025 and will grow to $14 billion by the end of 2026. Of that, $3 billion will be generated outside China, with the US now the largest international market.

By 2026, the US will account for 50% of all microdrama revenues outside China, reaching $1.5 billion, underlining the format’s rapid global expansion.

“Microdramas are no longer a niche experiment. They are becoming a core driver of mobile video engagement,” said Maria Rua Aguete, Head of Media and Entertainment at Omdia speaking at MIP London. “What stands out is not just revenue growth, but the intensity of usage. On mobile, microdrama apps are generating more daily viewing time than the world’s biggest streaming platforms.”

Microdramas outperform streamers on daily minutes watched

Typically, one to two minutes long, vertically formatted and mobile first, microdramas primarily target women aged 25 to 45, although new genres are trying to reach more male and other new audiences too.

Discovery is driven through platforms such as YouTube, Instagram and TikTok.

Omdia’s analysis of Q4 2025 mobile usage data from Sensor Tower shows that in the US, microdrama apps such as ReelShort generate higher daily mobile viewing time than major streaming services:

  • ReelShort: 35.7 minutes per user per day
  • Netflix: 24.8 minutes
  • Amazon Prime Video: 26.9 minutes
  • Disney+: 23.0 minutes

While Netflix continues to lead in monthly active mobile users in the US, with around 12 million compared with 1.1 million for ReelShort, engagement intensity tells a different story.

“Microdramas are winning the battle for attention, rather than scale, at least for now,” Aguete added. “This is the metric streamers care about most as they look to grow mobile usage and compete with social video platforms where daily engagement is approaching 80 minutes.”

With companies like YouTube engaging audiences on mobiles and now also on the TV set, streamers like Netflix or Disney need vertical and short content to drive engagement on mobile phones.

Global Momentum and Market Expansion

The microdrama trend is accelerating in international markets:

  • UK: FlickReels generates higher daily usage than Amazon Prime Video (22.39 minutes vs. 21.47 minutes).
  • Mexico: DramaBox outpaces Amazon Prime Video (27.9 minutes vs. 23.8 minutes) and Disney+ (22.5 minutes).

Traditional media players are also adapting to this shift. Platforms like TelevisaUnivision’s ViX in Mexico and GloboPlay in Brazil are embedding short-form serial content within AVOD and freemium ecosystems, leveraging microdramas to boost engagement and reach.

Strategic implications for global streamers

Omdia’s analysis suggests that global streamers including Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, and Disney+ face increasing pressure to close the mobile engagement gap with social platforms such as YouTube and TikTok, where users spend nearly 80 minutes per day.

“Vertical video strategies, including microdramas, are becoming a logical next step for streamers that want to increase mobile usage without cannibalizing their long-form premium content,” Aguete concluded. “Microdramas are not replacing TV or streaming, but they are reshaping how audiences consume storytelling on mobile.”

Bundling Opportunities for Telcos

Microdramas are also an opportunity for telcos, by offering them a unique structural opportunity beyond just a content trend. These mobile-first, snackable videos are highly addictive, low-cost, and optimized for daily engagement—perfect for mobile consumption.

As telcos face challenges like ARPU pressure, commoditized connectivity, churn, and heavy 5G investments, microdramas could serve as:

  • A bundled value-add
  • A churn reduction tool
  • An ad-funded partnership opportunity
  • A data-driven engagement engine

Microdramas are reshaping mobile video consumption, creating new opportunities for telcos, streamers, and content creators alike.

ABOUT OMDIA

Omdia, part of TechTarget, Inc. d/b/a Informa TechTarget (Nasdaq: TTGT), is a technology research and advisory group. Our deep knowledge of tech markets grounded in real conversations with industry leaders and hundreds of thousands of data points, make our market intelligence our clients’ strategic advantage. From R&D to ROI, we identify the greatest opportunities and move the industry forward.

Contacts

More News From Omdia

Omdia: More Than Half of 45–54 Year Olds Now Watch Mobile Video While Watching TV

LONDON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--New primary research data from Omdia reveals that media multitasking is no longer just a Gen Z habit. More than half of adults aged 45–54 now watch video clips on their mobile phones while watching television, highlighting a major shift in viewing behavior and the growing fragmentation of attention across screens. According to Omdia’s latest consumer research, 52% of US viewers aged 45–54 reported watching video clips on their phones while watching TV in November 2025,...

Omdia: Global PC Shipments to Decline 12% in 2026 Amid Severe Memory and Storage Supply Challenges

LONDON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Worldwide shipments of desktops, notebooks and workstations in 2026 are expected to decline by 12% to 245 million units, according to the latest outlook from Omdia. This forecast is grounded in sharp increases in memory and storage prices - particularly the expected minimum 60% rise in 1Q26. Further upward price pressure is anticipated throughout the remaining quarters of the year, though subsequent increases are expected to be more moderate. Since 1Q25, the costs of ma...

Omdia: Global Smartphone Shipments to Fall 7% in 2026 Amid Memory Constraints and Geopolitical Pressures

LONDON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Global smartphone shipments are forecast to decline by around 7% year-on-year in 2026 according to Omdia’s latest outlook. This projection based on Q1 memory price assumptions, which indicate that pricing pressure and constrained supply will begin to ease in the second half of the year. The global smartphone market will face significant challenges in 2026 as tightening memory supply and elevated pricing place increasing cost pressures for vendors. Memory now accounts fo...
Back to Newsroom