Skip to main content

125 million subscribers are paying to ‘Netflix and chill’ these days

Netflix viewers may like to chill, but Netflix itself is still hot — the streaming service has just reached 125 million subscribers. The milestone was announced on Monday, April 16 during the company’s first quarterly earnings call of 2018, whereupon the company revealed that it had added 7.4 million subscribers in the first quarter of the year.

This represents a 50-percent increase in new subscribers from the same quarter last year, and outpaced analyst expectations. As Daniel Ives, an analyst with GBH Insights, wrote in an investor note, the results are “eye popping.”

Netflix’s growth is particularly noteworthy against a background of other struggling tech companies, who are facing increased scrutiny of how they’re using their users’ data. Netflix, on the other hand, is simply providing entertainment to its customers. Producing this content involves quite a cost, though. The streaming service has pledged to produce no fewer than 700 original TV shows, movies, and specials this year. The associated price tag? A whopping $8 billion.

But it’s not just original content that is helping Netflix’s growth. Rather, the company’s burgeoning subscriber numbers come largely from overseas — indeed, the majority of new subscribers in the first three months of 2018, nearly 5.5 million, are from countries outside of the U.S. As Ives wrote, “It shows the company’s aggressive international expansion strategy is bearing fruit and putting major fuel in the company’s growth engine for the rest of 2018 and beyond.”

This impressive growth has surprised even Netflix’s own executive team, who noted on a conference call with analysts that they did not fully anticipate these levels of success.

“We’ve outperformed the business in a way we didn’t predict,” David Wells, Netflix’s CFO, said on Monday. “The business has grown faster than we expected.”

And it doesn’t seem as though Netflix will be slowing down anytime soon. In the next quarter, the company hopes to add another 6.2 million subscribers. If these estimates prove to be correct, this will once again outpace analyst expectations.

That said, Netflix hasn’t cemented its position as the reigning monarch of the streaming industry quite yet. As CNN notes, Apple is looking to make big investments in its own original content, while Amazon is said to be looking to spend as much as $1 billion on just one TV show. Still, it’ll likely be a while yet before we start replacing the phrase “Netflix and chill” with “HBO Go and chill.” Really, it just doesn’t roll off the tongue as easily.

Lulu Chang
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Fascinated by the effects of technology on human interaction, Lulu believes that if her parents can use your new app…
Netflix pledges $100 million for Black communities
Netflix on mobile

Netflix promised to put $100 million toward financial institutions and organizations that support Black communities.

"We believe bringing more capital to these communities can make a meaningful difference for the people and businesses in them, helping more families buy their first home or save for college, and more small businesses get started or grow," the streaming giant announced Tuesday.

Read more
Netflix subscribers run into fewer service problems, new study finds
streaming netflix high definition wont kill the internet featured image unsplash

Following shelter-at-home orders, more people today are subscribed to Netflix than ever. Even so, a new study by American-based data analytics company, JD Power (via Bloomberg), finds that Netflix viewers are facing the least number of service problems than viewers of other streaming platforms.

The report, which surveyed 1,232 U.S. adults in late April, states that Netflix subscribers ran into about 0.7 streaming glitches per hour watched -- followed by Hulu and Amazon Prime Video’s score of 0.11. Disney+ and Google’s YouTube TV, both of which are relatively new services, landed on the 4th and 5th spots at 0.12 and 0.13 respectively.

Read more
Netflix added way more subscribers than it expected in first quarter
streaming netflix high definition wont kill the internet featured image unsplash

With the coronavirus pandemic putting many folks in lockdown, it’s little surprise that Netflix has been picking up new subscribers for its streaming service. But the extent of that growth may surprise some.

According to data for the first quarter of 2020 released by the company on Tuesday, April 21, Netflix added a whopping 15.8 million subscribers to its service globally, almost double the expected figure of 8.2 million. The service now has 182 million subscribers worldwide.

Read more