Roku Platform Revenue Crossed $1 Billion in a Quarter for the First Time in Q1 2026
Roku reported in its Q1 2026 earnings (January through March 2026, results published May 1, 2026) that platform revenue — comprising advertising sales through the Roku Channel and OneView DSP, content distribution fees charged to streaming services for placement on the Roku home screen and operating system, and data licensing — reached $1.02 billion in the quarter, crossing $1 billion for the first time in the company’s history and representing a 16 percent year-over-year increase from $881 million in Q1 2025. Roku’s Q1 2026 investor filings show active accounts reaching 92 million at the end of March 2026, up from 81 million in Q1 2025, with streaming hours in the quarter reaching 34.1 billion — approximately 375 hours per active account per quarter, or slightly more than four hours of daily streaming across the active account base. Roku’s operating system is now installed in more than 50 percent of smart TVs shipped in the United States — a distribution position secured through manufacturing licensing agreements with TCL, Hisense, Philips, and Sharp — and Roku completed its integration of Vizio’s SmartCast installed base following the $2.3 billion acquisition that closed in December 2024, with the combined platform converting approximately 19 million Vizio SmartCast active accounts to the Roku OS experience through a software update rolled out between January and March 2026. The Vizio integration added accounts, incremental streaming hours, and SmartCast advertising inventory to Roku’s platform metrics without requiring hardware replacement, because Roku’s operating system supports remote flashing of compatible Vizio television hardware — making the Vizio acquisition structurally more efficient than a traditional TV brand acquisition that would require new device shipments to grow the active account base. Trailing twelve-month average revenue per user (ARPU) — Roku’s measure of platform monetisation efficiency — reached $44.49 at the end of Q1 2026, up from $40.67 at Q1 2025 end, reflecting both the increasing advertising CPM rates that Roku commands in the connected television market and the growing proportion of Roku’s active account base using the Roku Channel (Roku’s own free ad-supported streaming service) at a rate that generates higher advertising revenue per hour watched than third-party streaming apps distributed through the Roku platform. Disney’s streaming revenue crossing $6 billion in Q2 FY2026 illustrates the premium streaming content investment that Roku’s platform distributes: Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+ collectively representing a significant share of the streaming hours watched on Roku devices, and Disney’s willingness to pay Roku content distribution fees for prominent placement on the Roku home screen reflecting the subscriber acquisition value that algorithmic home screen positioning provides to streaming services competing in a market where consumer streaming service selection is increasingly made at the operating system layer rather than through independent app stores.
Roku’s connected television advertising business sits at the intersection of two structural shifts in media buying: the secular decline of linear television as the primary vehicle for video advertising and the corresponding migration of brand advertising budgets toward digital video environments that offer targeting precision, measurement, and brand-safety guarantees that traditional television buying cannot provide. eMarketer’s Q1 2026 connected television advertising market analysis shows Roku capturing approximately 40 percent of connected television ad impressions in the United States — a share derived from the combination of Roku’s own Roku Channel inventory, the OneView DSP-facilitated advertising on third-party streaming apps running on Roku OS, and the home screen advertising placements that Roku controls independently of which streaming service the viewer subsequently opens. eMarketer’s connected TV advertising forecast for 2026 projects the US CTV advertising market reaching $33 billion annually — up from $24 billion in 2024 — with Roku’s 40 percent impression share translating to approximately $13 billion in Roku-influenced advertising spend, of which Roku captures a direct revenue share on its own inventory and an indirect platform fee on third-party inventory facilitated through its operating system. Roku’s advertising technology advantage over competing smart TV platforms — Samsung Tizen, Google TV, LG webOS — is the OneView DSP, which allows advertisers to plan and buy both Roku-owned inventory and third-party inventory (including connected TV inventory purchased through other platforms) through a single interface, with cross-device attribution that traces a viewer who saw a Roku Channel ad to a subsequent purchase on the advertiser’s e-commerce platform, providing the closed-loop measurement that direct-response advertisers require to optimise CTV spend at the same precision they apply to search and social advertising. Roku’s Ads Manager — a self-serve advertising platform launched in Q4 2025 targeting small and medium-sized businesses that historically bought local television advertising — contributed to a 31 percent year-over-year increase in SMB advertisers on the Roku platform in Q1 2026, a segment whose growth diversifies Roku’s advertiser base away from the large brand advertisers that historically dominated connected television spending and toward the performance-focused SMB buyers whose advertising spend is less cyclical and more directly tied to revenue return metrics. Netflix’s $82.7 billion content acquisition from Warner Bros represents the content scale at which Roku’s largest platform distribution partner is operating: Netflix’s investment in becoming the default choice for scripted drama and theatrical-quality content reinforces the value of Roku as the distribution layer through which Netflix reaches its US subscriber base, since a majority of US Netflix viewing hours are delivered through Roku-OS devices, making the Netflix-Roku distribution relationship symbiotic in a way that gives both parties leverage — Netflix needs Roku’s 92 million active accounts, and Roku needs Netflix’s content investment to maintain the viewing engagement that sustains its platform CPM rates.
What Roku’s Vizio Integration and SmartCast Conversion Reveals About CTV Platform Consolidation
The Vizio SmartCast to Roku OS conversion — approximately 19 million active accounts migrated through a software update rather than device replacement — is the clearest evidence yet that smart television operating system consolidation is occurring through software acquisition rather than hardware manufacturing, a structural difference from previous media technology consolidations (cable operator mergers, satellite TV acquisitions) that required capital-intensive physical plant ownership. By acquiring Vizio’s installed base through software conversion, Roku effectively paid approximately $121 per converted active account — well below the customer acquisition cost of attracting a new streaming viewer through direct advertising, which Roku’s Q1 2026 ARPU trajectory implies is recovered in approximately 33 months of platform advertising revenue per account. The conversion also demonstrates Roku’s technical capacity to update television firmware remotely at scale, a capability that becomes strategically significant as the smart TV market consolidates around three or four dominant operating systems: a television manufacturer whose OS platform loses commercial traction can sell its installed base to a dominant platform through a software acquisition rather than accepting permanent stranded asset economics from unsupported hardware. Spotify’s 702 million monthly active users and video podcast expansion represents the adjacent audio and podcast content category that Roku is increasingly distributing through its platform as podcasting video formats (Spotify, YouTube, and independent podcast video) grow in watch time on connected televisions — with Roku channel carriage of Spotify video podcasts and YouTube content contributing to the streaming hours growth that drives ARPU rather than competing with it. The connected television operating system market’s competitive structure — Roku with approximately 50 percent of US smart TV shipments, Google TV with approximately 20 percent, Samsung Tizen with approximately 17 percent, LG webOS with approximately 8 percent — resembles the mobile OS duopoly in its winner-take-most economics: advertising measurement, data partnerships, and developer distribution tools improve non-linearly with scale, which means Roku’s installed base lead compounds in a way that makes the gap to second-place Google TV more difficult to close with each additional quarter of Roku account growth. YouTube’s Gen Z streaming dominance and creator economy economics establishes the primary competitor to Roku’s streaming hours growth thesis: YouTube’s connected television viewing hours — which YouTube disclosed as the fastest-growing screen type for YouTube viewing in its Q4 2025 earnings commentary — are disproportionately concentrated on Roku OS devices, meaning YouTube’s growth as a connected television platform is simultaneously a Roku platform win (more streaming hours on Roku devices, more Roku Channel and OneView advertising exposure) and a competitive signal (YouTube’s content breadth and algorithmic recommendation quality attracts viewing time that might otherwise migrate to subscription streaming services that pay higher Roku content distribution fees per active subscriber).
What Roku’s $1 Billion Platform Revenue Reveals About the Strategic Discipline Behind Owning the Software Layer
Roku made a decision that most hardware companies refuse to make: it decided that the television hardware was not the business. Deciding what you are not is as important as deciding what you are, and most organizations cannot make that distinction cleanly under the pressure of short-term revenue. Roku built televisions and streaming sticks in the early years because it needed hardware to establish the platform. But it consistently treated the hardware as a distribution vehicle — a way to get Roku OS onto screens — rather than as a profit center. The discipline of subordinating hardware margin to platform adoption is the decision that produced $1 billion in platform revenue. A competitor that tried to capture both hardware margin and platform revenue optimized for neither.
The ownership principle applies to Roku’s relationship with streaming platforms as well. Roku’s value proposition to buyers is that it is neutral — it does not favor its own streaming content over competitors’ because it does not have streaming content in the way that hardware competitors with content divisions do. That neutrality is a product decision with a significant revenue implication: Roku captures a distribution fee from every streaming platform that wants access to its viewer base, without bearing the content cost that gives content-owning hardware competitors conflicting incentives between promoting third-party streaming and promoting their own content. Roku’s discipline is to own the aggregation layer and charge for access to it, rather than to compete at the content layer where it would face the largest streaming platforms simultaneously.
The test of Roku’s strategic position is what happens as streaming platforms develop their own connected TV distribution capabilities. Major streaming platforms with their own hardware have built on the premise that a platform can own its own aggregation layer and reduce its dependence on Roku’s distribution fee. If that premise is correct, Roku’s platform revenue ceiling is determined by how long major streaming platforms choose access to Roku’s viewer base over building their own distribution. The $1 billion platform revenue number tells you where Roku is today. The question of whether it compounds depends on whether Roku’s installed base inertia and its neutral aggregation brand are durable enough to maintain distribution economics as streaming platforms develop independent connected TV capabilities of their own.

