Deep-dive · March 2026

Parents rank Nickelodeon #1 for quality — ahead of Disney, Netflix & YouTube.

Survey of 410 U.S. parents, fielded March 3–18, 2026. 68% would pay for a standalone service; brand familiarity and perceived quality are the strongest drivers of intent.

KPI · 01
68.3%
Subscribe intent
would pay for a standalone service
KPI · 02
4.1 / 5
Brand relevance
avg relevance to viewing habits
KPI · 03
#1 of 6
Quality rank
vs Disney, Netflix, YouTube, PBS Kids, Roblox
KPI · 04
78%
Nostalgia interest
interested in nostalgic archive content
01 · Audience

Who we heard from

Demographics across 410 surveyed parents. The sample skews 25–44, mid-income, and split evenly between kids 2–6 and 7–12.

Q1 Age group
Q3 Household income
Q5 Child age range
Q2 Gender
02 · Habits

How families watch

78% of households report daily screen time. Streaming has displaced traditional cable for nearly two-thirds of the sample.

Q7 Screen-time frequency
Q15 Weekly viewing hours
Q4 How families pay for content
% of parents who report daily screen-time — by demographic
03 · Brand health

Awareness & perception

Unaided recall, logo recognition, perceived quality, and the associations parents bring to the brand.

Q8 Unaided brand recall (top 8)
Q9 Logo recognition
Q13 Brand relevance — 5-pt scale
Q12 Brand associations (top 8)
Q20 Perception today
Q21 Content quality
Q19 Brand familiarity
Brand relevance by demographic (avg / 5)
04 · Competitive

Against the whole field

Quality ranking vs Disney, Netflix, YouTube, PBS Kids and Roblox. Show-level recognition and recent touchpoints follow.

Q18 Brand quality ranking — avg rank, lower is better
Q10 Show recognition (top 8)
Q11 Attribution — "Is this a Nick show?"
Q22 Recent touchpoints with Nick
05 · Subscribe intent

Would parents pay for this?

The headline KPI — yes. Across demographic segments, positive intent stays above 55% in almost every cut.

68.3%
positive subscribe intent — combined "yes, definitely" and "probably yes" responses across all 410 parents.
Q24 Subscribe intent distribution

Who's most likely to subscribe?

By parent age
By child age
By household income
Q25 Nostalgia content interest
Q26 Co-viewing preference
Nostalgia interest by parent age (% positive)
06 · Drivers

What actually moves intent

Correlation analysis and the strategic takeaways the data supports.

Subscribe-intent drivers — correlation coefficients
Strong (≥ 0.5) Moderate (0.2–0.5) Weak (< 0.2)
Correlation strength — Cramér's V
Variable A Variable B Cramér's V Strength

Key insights

Actionable findings distilled from the survey.

01
Parents of kids aged 7–12 show 13-pt lower subscribe intent (61%) than parents of 2–6 year-olds (73%).
02
Brand familiarity (Q19) is the strongest predictor of subscribe intent — correlation 0.55.
03
Nostalgia interest is high across the board (78% positive); under-35 parents skew highest at 79%, 45+ parents at 70%.
04
Daily screen-time reported by 78% of respondents; streaming-only households represent 64% of the sample.
05
Logo recognition sits at 74% overall; brand quality ranked #1 of 6 tested competitors.
06
Content quality rated Good or Exceptional by 82% of parents of 7–12-year-olds (vs 79% of 2–6 parents).
07
Co-viewing preference — "family watches together" — is held by 32% of respondents.
08
Headline: 68% positive subscribe intent, 4.1/5 brand relevance — a concept worth prototyping.
i Cramér's V measures association between categorical variables (0 = none, 1 = perfect). Values above 0.3 indicate a meaningful relationship that warrants strategic attention.