Free ad-supported streaming TV, or FAST — streaming video’s version of linear TV programming — has been positioned as the next big thing in the streaming business. Or at least, it was.
The format’s early promise has faded under the weight of its own excess. While active U.S. FAST households have grown to an estimated 54 million, content providers’ obsession with volume has ballooned the market to 1,700 channels. Consequently, audience viewership is being spread unsustainably thin across a massive fragmented grid.
This dilution has triggered an “infinite inventory crisis” in the FAST space. Traditional television’s economic model was built on scarcity; by controlling a finite number of channels and primetime slots, networks maintained absolute pricing power over advertisers.
In contrast, by generating nonstop ad minutes that often play to zero viewers (linear streaming feeds remain always on, continuously burning through delivery costs and generating empty ad slots), FAST platforms have destroyed their pricing power. This forces CPMs (cost per mille, a standard advertising metric representing the cost of reaching 1,000 ad impressions) into a race to the bottom.
Case in point: Per a FASTMaster Intelligence forecast, under the current status quo, U.S. revenues will drop from an estimated $4 billion in 2026 to $3.5 billion by 2029 even if FAST sees 15% year-over-year hourly viewing growth.
Meanwhile, there exists no correlation between channels offered and engaged households. Peacock’s linear streaming option achieves the exact same engaged U.S. HH reach as Prime Video’s, despite carrying fewer than one-twentieth of the channels.
Ultimately, capturing SVOD-tier ad budgets requires trading cheap, always-on volume for engineered scarcity. FAST platforms must aggressively cull the channel long-tail and reduce ad loads, transforming the format from a dumping ground for legacy content libraries into a deliberately cultivated destination.
This requires a radical rethink: not incremental pruning but a fundamental reinvention of how channels are programmed, how grids are presented and what FAST is actually for. The platforms that survive the next five years will be those that treat curation as a competitive advantage rather than an operational afterthought.