Media, Entertainment & Sports Advisers

Reports

Pact UK Television Census 2023

The 2023 Pact Census reveals that TV sector revenues reached their highest ever levels in 2022, driven largely by the growth of international revenues and a significant increase in streaming commissions.

Total sector revenues returned to growth levels seen before the pandemic, increasing by 21.3 per cent on 2021 to reach a record £3,944 million.

While domestic TV revenues experienced slight growth, reaching their highest ever level of £2,207 million, international revenues grew sharply by 70 per cent to reach £1,618 million. This follows two years of decline in international revenues. This growth is likely due to the return of multiple major UK international productions The Crown and Sex Education, the UK launch of Apple TV and Disney + and the ongoing attractiveness of the UK TV market to global buyers.

Digital commissioning main driver of growth

Digital commissioning – or streaming – both domestically and internationally, was the main driver of growth in 2022.

Domestically, digital commissioning grew to £155 million, more than double (129%) than in 2021, probably due to broadcasters’ shifting commissioning strategies and prioritisation of their VOD services (e.g. iPlayer, ITVX, Channel 4, My5).

Internationally, digital services (e.g. Netflix, Amazon, Apple TV, Disney+) significantly increased their spending on UK independent producers by 133 per cent, reaching a total of £696 million.

Primary international commissions double, secondary rights decline

Overall commissioning revenues rose by 28.8 per cent to £3,306 million, with UK primary commissions increasing by 4.7 per cent to their highest ever level of £1,986 million.

Primary international commissions almost doubled (97%) to a new high of £1,320 million.

Conversely, there was a decline in secondary rights revenue to £407 million, down £102 million on 2021. This may be partially attributable to the increase in streaming activity, with SVOD platforms often taking all rights.

Mid and large sized indies benefitted most from post-pandemic boom

2022 also saw an increase in both PSB and multichannel commissioning spend with PSB commissioning spend increasing by 4.4 per cent and multichannel by 5.9 per cent.

The market share of mid-sized production companies (£5 - £25 million) increased as they entered higher turnover brackets. And over half of all commissioning spend (51%) went to producers with a turnover of above £70 million, largely due to more producers in this turnover bracket and international commissioning spend going to larger producers.

Spend on drama remains strong, factual entertainment decreases

Spend on factual entertainment (e.g. reality TV shows) shrunk the most of any genre (6% decrease), likely due to prevailing Covid-19 safety measures, while spend on drama continued to grow reaching 37 per cent of all UK spending in 2022. This was 2 per cent more than 2021 but not as high as the peak of 40 per cent in 2019.

The BBC was the largest spender on new programming, significantly increasing its share of commissioning spend in new programming to 41 per cent in 2022, from 27 per cent in 2021.

Click here to read the report in full.

Huw Evans