Netflix estimated to be watched in over 500,000 Irish homes

Two in five told Comreg they accessed the TV streaming service

Popular platform: Queen Elizabeth (Claire Foy) and Prince Philip (Matt Smith) share an intimate moment in Netflix’s “The Crown”.
Popular platform: Queen Elizabeth (Claire Foy) and Prince Philip (Matt Smith) share an intimate moment in Netflix’s “The Crown”.

Netflix is used by at least 500,000 Irish households, the findings of a survey by communications regulator Comreg indicate.

More than two in five, or some 42 per cent, of the households questioned for Comreg’s Ireland Communications Survey 2017 said they accessed the television streaming platform.

Netflix itself does not publish subscriber numbers on a country-by-country basis, and the precise popularity of its service here can only be estimated.

The company also does not release any viewership numbers, meaning the audience of high-profile original series such as The Crown, Stranger Things and Orange is the New Black is unknown.

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But if 42 per cent of Ireland’s 1.24 million fixed residential broadband subscriptions were to be used to access Netflix, in line with the survey sample, that would suggest a user base here of about 521,000.

If 42 per cent of Ireland’s 1.58 million television homes had access to the platform, that would indicate a higher tally of 663,000 Netflix households in Ireland. Not all television homes have access to broadband, however – a factor that may hold back the growth of the platform in rural areas.

As two of Netflix’s pricing plans allow for content to be viewed on more than one screen simultaneously, a certain amount of “piggybacking” on subscriptions between households is likely to be taking place.

The company, which began as a DVD-mailing service, has 118 million subscribers worldwide, about 63 million of which are located outside the US. The company has found its way into half of all US broadband households, according to market research firm Parks Associates.

‘Beautiful quarter’

In January, Netflix reported that it had a “beautiful” fourth-quarter, including a record pace for international subscriber additions.

Earlier this month, it agreed a deal with Sky, the largest pay-television provider in the Republic, that gives customers of Sky's premium Sky Q service direct access to Netflix content, with Netflix shows displayed alongside those of Sky on the latter's main menu. The service is also promoted to Virgin Media users in Ireland as part of a wider partnership agreed with Virgin parent Liberty Global in 2016.

Both moves will have boosted Netflix’s presence in Ireland, where the Californian company launched in 2012.

Comreg's research, conducted by Ipsos MBRI among 1,519 households at the end of 2017, found that usage of Netflix was much more frequent among younger age groups, with 56 per cent of 15-34-year-olds saying they accessed it compared to just 11 per cent of people 65-plus.

Some 11 per cent indicated they were customers Sky's Now TV service, which launched in Ireland last April, while 5 per cent said they watched Amazon Prime.

Although only 29 per cent households have a smart (connected) television, the majority expect that they will own one in five years’ time, the survey found.

Laura Slattery

Laura Slattery

Laura Slattery is an Irish Times journalist writing about media, advertising and other business topics