A Fundamental Shift in How We Pay
By 2025, the global subscription economy was estimated to be worth over $1.5 trillion, spanning streaming media, software tools, grocery delivery, and even fitness content. This is up from roughly $200 billion in 2016.
What started with Netflix and Spotify has expanded into virtually every category — meal kits, razor blades, mattresses, even car access. The common thread is convenience plus predictable billing.
The Numbers Behind the Growth
Average revenue per user (ARPU) for leading subscription platforms has steadily increased, with streaming services pushing ARPU through tiered pricing, ad-supported tiers, and bundle offerings. This is a more sustainable growth model than user count alone.
Churn rates remain the critical metric. Platforms that maintain annual churn below 30% typically have healthy unit economics; those above 50% struggle to sustain growth profitably.
What This Means for Consumers
For businesses, the focus has shifted from customer acquisition to customer retention. A report on the team tracking this market across multiple countries notes that Cohort analysis, engagement metrics, and lifecycle marketing have become as important as initial sign-ups. The era of easy subscription growth is giving way to a more mature phase.
The next decade of subscription economy will likely see more consolidation — bundles become the norm, individual standalone services face pressure to either merge or differentiate through hyper-specialization.