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Digital TV update - Q2 2010

Overview

1.1 Consumer survey results for the second quarter of 2010 show that take-up of digital television in UK households stood at 92.7%, up by 2.9 percentage points year on year.

1.2 Consumers are continuing to convert additional sets in the home. Almost 71% of all secondary TV sets had been converted to digital by the end of June 2010, up by one percentage point in a year but up 16 percentage points from two years ago.

1.3 Taking these figures together, 80% of all TV sets had converted to digital television by the end of Q2 2010 (this figure was stable year on year owing to a ‘spike’ in the Q2 2009 figure, but was up 11pp on two years previously). The remaining 20% of sets continue to receive analogue terrestrial broadcasts.

Other findings

1.4 Other findings in the second quarter of 2010 include:

  • Sales of DTT-enabled equipment reached almost 3.1 million units in Q2, up by 14% on Q2 2009. Integrated digital television sets (IDTVs) accounted for over 76% of sales in the quarter (2.3 million units). Almost all TV sets sold (99.5%) now include an integrated digital decoder. Freeview set-top boxes accounted for over 720,000 sales in the quarter, up 5.8% on Q2 2009.
  • In the year to Q2 2010 just over 14 million DTT units (IDTVs and set-top boxes) were sold, compared to 13 million in the previous year, an increase of 7.4%.
  • The number of homes claiming that DTT was their primary means of digital TV reception was 10.1 million, according to survey results in Q2 2010. This was equivalent to 39.3% of all homes and up by around 0.5 percentage points on Q2 2009.
  • Q2 2010 sales data from BBC/ITV freesat show that unit sales had reached around 1.25 million by the end of June, up from 1 million units in Q1 2010. Over three-quarters (80%) of freesat decoders sold supported HD services.
  • According to our consumer research results for Q2, around 1.6 million homes claimed to have access to some form of free-to-view digital satellite device on any set in the home. This was up from 1.3 million in the previous quarter and up by 900,000 year on year.
  • The Q2 survey also indicated that almost 9.3 million, or 36.5% of homes, received pay-satellite TV services, up 1.7 percentage points year on year. Separately, BSkyB reported that it added 90,000 subscribers to its pay television service in the UK and the Republic of Ireland during the fourth quarter; we estimate that around 70,000 of these were UK additions.
  • Research results for Q2 show that 13% of homes took cable television, up from 12% a year before. Separately, Virgin Media reported net additions of over 22,000 TV subscribers, with its total TV customer base now over 3.75 million. Digital cable added almost 26,000 subscribers in the quarter (including conversions from analogue cable), with over 99% of all cable television customers using digital cable services by Q2.

1.5 Points to note on the platform shares discussed in this report include:

  • In calculating platform totals, DTT-only homes are defined as those where DTT is the only multichannel television platform in the home or where the survey respondent considers DTT to be their primary viewing platform (figures for all homes using DTT on any set are included in Sections 2 and 3 of the report).
  • As DTV markets mature, the likelihood of overlap between DTV platforms grows. For example, a household with a pay service (from either a satellite or cable provider) in addition to free DTV equipment (such as DTT or free satellite), may often be recorded primarily as a pay satellite / cable home by the survey respondent.
  • Similarly, respondents with DTT and free satellite services may switch between the two services and may designate one or the other as the primary platform in the home; with their responses potentially changing over time.