After a year of flat growth, Peacock finally turned a corner in Q1. The Comcast-owned streamer added 5 million subscribers, growing its base to 41 million. The gain wasn’t organic—it was driven largely by a new Charter partnership that gave Spectrum TV subscribers access to Peacock Premium at no extra cost. But the strategy worked, and Comcast’s comments suggest more bundling could be on the horizon.
The bundling boost came at the right time. Peacock’s subscriber count had plateaued at 36 million for the previous two quarters, and 2024 overall was tepid. The Charter deal, finalized last fall but activated in Q1, helped reinvigorate momentum and pointed to how Comcast sees the service fitting into the broader ecosystem: a utility-like entertainment layer that gains strength when paired with broadband and pay TV.
Financials Tell the Story
The subscriber lift helped drive Peacock revenue up 16% year-over-year to $1.2 billion. Losses narrowed significantly, down to $215 million from $639 million in Q1 2024. The improvement wasn’t just top-line. Programming costs were lower this quarter (no exclusive NFL playoff game like last year), but ad and subscription revenue increased, pushing the streamer closer to profitability.
Comcast’s broader media segment, which includes Peacock, saw a 1.1% increase in revenue and a 21% bump in Adjusted EBITDA, totaling $1 billion for the quarter. It’s not massive growth, but it’s growth, and Peacock was the main driver.
Sports Is the Centerpiece
Sports continue to anchor Peacock’s value proposition. From the NFL and Premier League to the Olympics and, soon, the NBA, Comcast is betting on premium live sports as a way to attract and retain subscribers. The company spent big on NBA rights—reportedly $2.45 billion per year as part of a broader $77 billion deal—and it’s clear Comcast sees the NBA’s return to NBC as a “launch pad” for Peacock.
Comcast President Mike Cavanagh called sports a “key driver” for the platform. Not just for acquisition—but for engagement across Peacock’s full content slate. The strategy is to hook viewers with live sports and keep them engaged with Bravo’s original series and pay-one window movies.
Looking Ahead: SpinCo and Scale
Meanwhile, Comcast continues preparing for the spin-off of several of its cable networks—including MSNBC, CNBC, and USA Network—into a separate entity called SpinCo. Licensing negotiations are ongoing to keep some of that programming on Peacock after the separation.
For now, Peacock is still far from Netflix’s level of scale, and it’s operating in a fiercely competitive SVOD market. Analysts like MoffettNathanson argue scale is everything—and Peacock isn’t there yet. But Comcast isn’t chasing M&A just to keep up. Instead, it’s betting on bundles and partnerships to expand reach and maximize monetization.
For the first time in a while, that bet seems to be working.