Roku reported over $1 billion in revenue for the first time in Q3, a 16% year-over-year increase, as engagement across its platform and ad sales continued to grow. Alongside this milestone, Roku announced it will stop disclosing quarterly streaming household numbers and average revenue per user (ARPU), opting instead to emphasize streaming hours—a metric that better reflects how users actually engage with the platform. This shift suggests that household growth may be stabilizing, and the company now prioritizes metrics demonstrating viewer engagement and retention.
Roku’s Q3 Financial Performance
In its third-quarter earnings report, Roku shared details of its latest growth metrics:
- Total Revenue: Roku’s Q3 revenue hit $1.062 billion, marking a 16% increase from the prior year and surpassing internal forecasts and Wall Street expectations.
- Gross Profit and Net Earnings: The company reported $480 million in gross profit and a net loss of $0.06 per share, significantly better than the expected $0.32 loss per share.
- Platform Revenue: Platform revenue totaled $908 million, up 15% year-over-year, driven by advertising, subscription distribution, and sales on The Roku Channel.
- Device Revenue: Hardware sales brought in $154 million, with an $11.7 million loss in the segment offset by platform earnings.
These results underscore Roku’s growth in ad-supported content and subscription-based revenues.
Metrics Shift and Potential Plateau in Household Growth
Roku’s choice to stop reporting household numbers suggests that growth in this metric may be stabilizing. The company reported 85.5 million streaming households in Q3, up 2 million from the prior quarter. While streaming household growth remains positive, Roku’s shift indicates that viewer retention and actual engagement time are now more valuable indicators of the platform’s traction than basic user counts.
By emphasizing streaming hours over household numbers, Roku can provide a clearer picture of how well it holds user attention. This metric better reflects revenue potential from ads and subscriptions.
Why Streaming Hours Are a More Meaningful Engagement Metric
Streaming hours measure the total time users spend watching content on Roku, providing a deeper insight into engagement than household counts, which measure device or account reach. Streaming hours are beneficial for several reasons:
- Accurate Viewer Engagement: Unlike household numbers, streaming hours reveal actual viewing behavior, showing the number of users and how much time they spend on the platform. Roku’s Q3 streaming hours reached 32 billion, up 20% year-over-year, showing strong viewer retention.
- Actionable for Advertisers: Streaming hours correlate with ad inventory, providing advertisers with a clearer picture of viewer attention. The more time users spend on Roku, the greater the ad potential, making streaming hours a more valuable metric for partners and stakeholders.
- Better Measure of Growth: As the streaming industry moves away from top-level user metrics, streaming hours deliver a more authentic measure of viewer loyalty, giving stakeholders an accurate picture of how audiences engage with content on the platform.
Why ARPU Still Matters
While household numbers may not be the best gauge of engagement, Roku’s decision to discontinue ARPU reporting is a notable loss for those tracking financials. ARPU has been a reliable indicator of Roku’s ability to monetize its user base across ads, subscriptions, and other revenue streams. Without it, there’s a significant gap in understanding how revenue-per-user trends develop over time—a key metric for evaluating Roku’s growth in both mature and emerging markets.
The Take
Roku’s first $1 billion quarter highlights its success in capturing viewer attention and ad revenue, but the change in metrics signals a shift toward longer-term engagement over basic user counts. Focusing on streaming hours offers a more reliable picture of viewer loyalty and ad potential, aligning with Roku’s goal of driving deeper engagement. While streaming hours deliver a clearer sense of user interest, ARPU remains a valuable metric for stakeholders—and its absence will leave a gap in evaluating Roku’s monetization progress.
In a maturing market, Roku’s pivot to engagement-based metrics is timely, reflecting its intent to drive sustained viewer interaction and meaningful growth.