/

Insights

User Retention in Streaming Services: Why Netflix Leads Over Apple TV+ and Paramount+

User Retention in Streaming Services: Why Netflix Leads Over Apple TV+ and Paramount+

User retention in streaming services
User retention in streaming services

Key Factors Behind Netflix’s Superior User Retention

In the competitive world of media and entertainment, user retention in streaming services has become a crucial measure of success. Netflix consistently excels at retaining users longer than its competitors, Apple TV+ and Paramount+. An analysis of the retention cycle shows that most Apple TV+ and Paramount+ users cancel their subscriptions within six months. In contrast, Netflix subscribers—except in APAC—remain subscribed for over two years.

Why is APAC an Outlier in Netflix’s User Retention?

The APAC region stands out as an exception in Netflix’s otherwise strong global retention. One major reason is that APAC was the last region where Netflix launched, only arriving in 2016. Additionally, the service is unavailable in China, one of the biggest markets in the region, limiting Netflix’s reach in APAC. 

What Drives Netflix’s Global User Retention Success?

1. Early Market Entry:

Netflix’s early presence in the streaming market plays a significant role in its retention success. It entered the U.S. market in 2007 and expanded globally by 2016. This gave Netflix an advantage over Apple TV+ (2019) and Paramount+ (2021-2022), which entered the market during a much more competitive period.

2. Extensive Content Library:

A key driver of Netflix’s user retention is its vast content library. Netflix’s global catalog is 302% larger than Paramount+ and a staggering 8,087% larger than Apple TV+. The number of original titles on Netflix is 10 times greater than Apple TV+ and 45 times larger than Paramount+. This sheer volume of content keeps users engaged and subscribed longer.

3. Genre Preferences and Appeal:

Netflix’s genre offerings also help retain users. While Apple TV+ features only two of the top five globally preferred genres—Drama and Comedy—Paramount+ caters better to regional tastes. For instance, in APAC and LATAM, Paramount+ offers four of the top five genres: Comedy, Drama, Action, and Adventure. Netflix’s genre alignment is strong in UCAN but slightly less appealing in other regions. Still, its vast library ensures a wide variety of content that appeals to users across the globe.

The Role of Pricing in User Retention

Price plays a vital role in user retention in streaming services. When comparing the median prices of standard monthly plans, Paramount+ stands out as the most affordable option, except in EMEA, where Netflix offers cheaper plans. In EMEA and LATAM, Netflix is the only platform with an ad-supported plan, priced at an average of $4.72 USD in LATAM, whereas the standard plans for Apple TV+ and Paramount+ average $6.74 USD and $4.53 USD, respectively. In EMEA, the price difference becomes even more evident, with Netflix’s ad-supported plan being $3 USD cheaper than the standard options from its competitors. In APAC and UCAN, Paramount+ also offers ad-supported plans that are more affordable than Netflix’s, but these are only available in Australia and Canada.

How Netflix Retains Its Users

Several factors contribute to Netflix’s success in user retention for streaming services. The platform’s vast content library, genre alignment, and competitive pricing have helped it maintain a dominant position in the global streaming market. Netflix also continues to innovate, which allows it to keep up with changing user preferences and secure long-term customer loyalty.

As the streaming industry evolves and competition grows, Netflix’s ability to deliver diverse content at competitive prices will remain crucial to retaining users. While Apple TV+ and Paramount+ offer competitive features and pricing in specific regions, Netflix’s balanced approach keeps it ahead in terms of user retention. This well-rounded strategy ensures Netflix remains a leader in the global streaming industry, consistently attracting and retaining users.

Powered by BB Media, a Fabric Data company

Read More Articles

We're constantly pushing the boundaries of what's possible and seeking new ways to improve our services.

Origin Nexus Entertainment Search API with StartDateStart and StartDateEnd date range filters applied, returning a list of movies and TV titles with upcoming streaming availability dates across major U.S. platforms.

May 11, 2026

Filter Content by Streaming Availability Dates with the Origin Nexus API

Developers can now filter movies and TV titles by the date they become available on streaming platforms, using two new Origin Nexus API parameters. Here is what you can build with them and why availability-date filtering changes how audiences discover content before it starts trending.

Illustration showing three separate department systems, distribution, marketing, and rights management, each holding a different version of the same content record, contrasted with a single unified metadata platform feeding all downstream systems from one authoritative source.

May 7, 2026

Your Metadata Has More Than One Version of the Truth. That's the Problem.

When three departments each maintain their own record for the same title, none of them wrong but none of them the same, the real cost isn't the occasional incident. It's the permanent overhead of a metadata environment nobody fully trusts. Here's what a genuine source of truth looks like and what it takes to build one.

Illustration showing a media operations workflow moving from fragmented manual coordination across email, spreadsheets, and verbal handoffs to a structured, automated system with centralized job tracking and task progression.

May 6, 2026

Media Workflow Automation: How Modern Facilities Are Eliminating Manual Handoffs

Manual handoffs are not just an inconvenience in media operations — they are a structural cost that scales with every job, every team member, and every new client. Here's how modern facilities are replacing coordination overhead with automated workflows, and what that shift looks like in practice.

World map highlighting global streaming platform developments for April 2026, including new launches in Argentina, Brazil, Germany, India, and the United States, HBO Max's European and Indian expansion, AVOD updates across North America, and sports rights shifts in Central America and Europe.

May 5, 2026

The Streaming Moves That Mattered in April 2026

April 2026 reshaped the global streaming map in ways that matter beyond the headlines. HBO Max completed its European rollout, AVOD platforms consolidated around clear winners, sports rights redrew regional competition in Central America and Europe, and niche platforms continued carving out specific audiences. Here's what the month's moves mean for content strategy and distribution planning.

Xytech X2 benefits

May 4, 2026

What ScheduALL Got Right About Transmission — and Where Xytech’s X2 Goes Further

ScheduALL built its reputation in broadcast by solving a genuinely hard problem: transmission scheduling that understands how resources relate, not just whether they are individually available. Xytech's X2 Transmission replicates that relational foundation and goes further, adding a cloud-native architecture, a Network Visualizer, and an AI scheduling layer that changes what experienced transmission teams can accomplish in a day.

A layered pyramid or stacked diagram showing the five metadata types from bottom to top

Apr 30, 2026

Metadata: The Hidden Engine Behind Every Streaming Recommendation

Metadata is the hidden engine behind every streaming recommendation. For platforms competing on content discovery, the quality, depth, and normalization of movie and TV metadata — from genre tags and contributor records to thematic enrichment and availability windows — determines whether recommendation engines surface the right title or settle for a generic list. This post breaks down the layers of entertainment metadata that matter most, why sparse or inconsistent data produces shallow discovery experiences, and how continuous enrichment pipelines are the only scalable answer to keeping a catalog current. If your platform's engagement metrics aren't where they should be, your metadata infrastructure is worth examining.

Ready to take your data to the next level?

Copyright © 2026 Fabric. All Rights Reserved

Powered by AWS

Ready to take your data to the next level?

Copyright © 2026 Fabric. All Rights Reserved

Powered by AWS

Ready to take your data to the next level?

Copyright © 2025 Fabric. All Rights Reserved

Powered by AWS

Ready to take your data to the next level?

Copyright © 2025 Fabric. All Rights Reserved

Powered by AWS