>That’s roughly two visits a year for every person living in the United States; the nation’s population factored at an estimate of 347.3 million.
If you went to the movies more than twice in 2025, congrats. You are above average.
>The annual report also provides some light on attendance in regards to windows and that’s that 35.6% of all moviegoers went to see movies in the first 3 days of release. Compare that to 73.2% of all attendees watched movies in their first 14 days of release, while 90.7% of all moviegoers headed to cinemas during pics’ first 30 days of release.
Netflix’s alleged plans to have 17-day windows would absolutely affect overall theatrical revenue and attendance.
qball8001 on
I went from going every Tuesday to once very other week to once a month now. I’m still on the high end but there just isn’t anything I wanna see anymore
DiligentApartment139 on
What’s about Canada? All box office numbers include Canada but they are talking only about American and american population.
misguidedkent on
>However, admissions were down from EntTelligence’s 2024 figure of 820 million, by -4.9% with the previous 12 months seeing a spike in tickets prices across the board, read general price of admission was $13.29, + 5.7% from 2024, while the price of a premium large format ticket was $17.69, +4.9%.
I used to go 100+ times a year now I only go once every 2 weeks. Maybe like 10% of the people I know go 1-2x a year, the rest don’t go at all since Covid and would rather wait for Netflix or Disney plus or peacock
PlanetG3000 on
THIS is the number that matters.
For all of the babble every time a film was a hit about “Theaters dying when?” “Who says the industry is dead?”
Well, momentary wins don’t mean anything. Year-over-year attendance is down. That is the slow death nobody wants to recognize. It’s the slow, creeping death that has been experienced since North American ticket sales peaked in 2002.
For 23 years…there has been no year selling as many domestic tickets as 2002. Let that sink in.
It is a slow, gradual death withs some slight ups and downs…but spread across 20+ years…it is a downward trend and nobody can deny that. It isn’t a year-to-year problem, it isn’t an “oh strikes hurt this year, oh the economy is bad right now”
We have date from the entire New Millennium. Regardless of ALL factors…attendance has only been in slow overall decline since 2002. We’ve never peaked that high again.
MultipleNames82 on
I know a year in advance how many times I’ll go the the theatre. I only go for for movies that look interesting to me and are worth the money to not just see at home.
I used to go to the movies just to check out whatever was playing. But with crazy prices and better TV tech at home, I haven’t done that in a decade.
7 Comments
>That’s roughly two visits a year for every person living in the United States; the nation’s population factored at an estimate of 347.3 million.
If you went to the movies more than twice in 2025, congrats. You are above average.
>The annual report also provides some light on attendance in regards to windows and that’s that 35.6% of all moviegoers went to see movies in the first 3 days of release. Compare that to 73.2% of all attendees watched movies in their first 14 days of release, while 90.7% of all moviegoers headed to cinemas during pics’ first 30 days of release.
Netflix’s alleged plans to have 17-day windows would absolutely affect overall theatrical revenue and attendance.
I went from going every Tuesday to once very other week to once a month now. I’m still on the high end but there just isn’t anything I wanna see anymore
What’s about Canada? All box office numbers include Canada but they are talking only about American and american population.
>However, admissions were down from EntTelligence’s 2024 figure of 820 million, by -4.9% with the previous 12 months seeing a spike in tickets prices across the board, read general price of admission was $13.29, + 5.7% from 2024, while the price of a premium large format ticket was $17.69, +4.9%.
https://preview.redd.it/of89ampysyag1.jpeg?width=691&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=8f4ad95711258c1f130b38dcd2a6e46c016be4e5
I used to go 100+ times a year now I only go once every 2 weeks. Maybe like 10% of the people I know go 1-2x a year, the rest don’t go at all since Covid and would rather wait for Netflix or Disney plus or peacock
THIS is the number that matters.
For all of the babble every time a film was a hit about “Theaters dying when?” “Who says the industry is dead?”
Well, momentary wins don’t mean anything. Year-over-year attendance is down. That is the slow death nobody wants to recognize. It’s the slow, creeping death that has been experienced since North American ticket sales peaked in 2002.
For 23 years…there has been no year selling as many domestic tickets as 2002. Let that sink in.
It is a slow, gradual death withs some slight ups and downs…but spread across 20+ years…it is a downward trend and nobody can deny that. It isn’t a year-to-year problem, it isn’t an “oh strikes hurt this year, oh the economy is bad right now”
We have date from the entire New Millennium. Regardless of ALL factors…attendance has only been in slow overall decline since 2002. We’ve never peaked that high again.
I know a year in advance how many times I’ll go the the theatre. I only go for for movies that look interesting to me and are worth the money to not just see at home.
I used to go to the movies just to check out whatever was playing. But with crazy prices and better TV tech at home, I haven’t done that in a decade.