Despite rising costs, spending on sports rights is expected to experience a slight decrease in 2025 before resuming growth. This dip is due to factors such as ESPN dropping its MLB coverage and the absence of Olympic Games for some broadcasters. However, streaming services are increasingly investing in live sports to attract and retain subscribers.
Major media companies, particularly Fox and Disney, dedicate a substantial portion of their content budgets to sports. Fox leads with over 60% allocated to sports in 2024-2025, followed by Disney at approximately 45%. While a 5% drop in total sports spending is projected for 2025 ($30.5 billion), compared to 2024, this still represents a significant increase (34%) from five years prior.
The high cost of sports rights is justified by their ability to drive engagement, attract subscribers, reduce churn, and boost platform usage for streaming services. Live sports remain a key driver of viewership on both linear TV and streaming platforms.
Streaming services like Netflix and Amazon are recognizing the increasing importance of live sports in their content strategies, investing heavily to secure rights and attract viewers.
As the rising costs of sports rights remain a persistent headache for broadcasters (albeit a delight for league commissioners), a key to understanding the current media landscape lies in understanding sports’ impact on the financial landscape.
As explored in the Variety Intelligence Platform special report “Sports Rights: Streamers vs. TV Networks,” spending on broadcast rights and other sports-related costs unsurprisingly makes up a significant share of content expenses for the largest media companies. Proportionally, the biggest spender is Fox, with more than 60% of its 2024 and 2025 content budgets expected to go toward sports, according to MoffettNathanson estimates issued last month; Disney follows at about 45%.
While sports spending is projected to grow in the long run, MN forecasts most of the legacy media companies will record a slight dip this year as they readjust their budgets.
For instance, Disney’s ESPN is soon dropping its $550 million-per-year Major League Baseball coverage, and NBCUniversal would naturally spend less in a year without the Olympic Games (though Comcast in March secured U.S. Olympics rights for NBC and Peacock through 2036 for a cool $3 billion).
For streaming’s tech players, however, live sports are becoming an increasingly important part of their content strategy. Sports will hold steady at 2% of Netflix’s budget this year even as it increases overall spend by more than $1 billion, while Amazon will devote more than a fifth of its 2025 content outlays to sports thanks to its new NBA deal.
All told, the major players are expected to spend $30.5 billion on sports this year, accounting for more than 20% of their total outlays. This would mark a 5% drop in sports spending from 2024, though a whopping 34% increase from just five years ago.
What value do sports provide to justify these stratospheric fees? Plenty: The genre drives engagement, promotes new subscriptions, reduces churn and increases time-on-platform stats for streaming services, while being more or less the sole remaining appointment viewing on linear TV.
Live sports broadcasts, after all, accounted for a record 74 out of the top 100 primetime U.S. telecasts in 2024 and continue to draw in the high-paying advertisers networks covet.
As such, they will likely continue to account for an ever-larger share of media companies’ spending so long as the audiences are there. And there’s no indication that audiences are going anywhere but up.
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