Viewership of children’s cable programming declined significantly in the past decade. Nickelodeon, Disney Channel, and Cartoon Network lost more than half of their total viewership between 2016 and 2023, according to Nielsen. While children still spend an average of a little over an hour (1:13) per day with linear TV in 2025, we expect that to continue declining into 2026, when YouTube will surpass linear TV, per our forecast. This is tied to cord-cutting as well as YouTube’s availability and content diversity compared with traditional TV.
Children under 12 spend an average of 1:48 a day with YouTube, according to Giraffe Insights and Precise TV. This is followed by video-on-demand (VOD) (1:46) and broadcast TV (1:35). YouTube is free and easily accessible on mobile devices, and an ecosystem of children's content creators has emerged to dominate viewing time. The biggest trends among child viewers include:
Gen Alphas are more than twice as likely to remember ads on YouTube compared with other platforms. More than half of children under 12 (53%) remember seeing ads on YouTube compared with broadcast TV (23%), according to Giraffe Insights and Precise TV. This is unsurprising, as much of the content is repetitive, and roughly 80% of the generation watches YouTube.
Read the full report, Gen Alpha Digital Habits 2025.