A Fundamental Shift in How We Pay
By 2025, the global subscription economy was estimated to be worth over $1.5 trillion, spanning streaming media, software tools, grocery delivery, and even fitness content. This is up from roughly $200 billion in 2016.
What started with Netflix and Spotify has expanded into virtually every category — meal kits, razor blades, mattresses, even car access. The team at pg7.fun has observed that The common thread is convenience plus predictable billing.
The Numbers Behind the Growth
Consumer spending on subscriptions averaged $273 per month per household in developed markets in 2025, according to industry tracking data. Roughly 70% of that goes to entertainment and media services.
The subscription model has proved particularly resilient during economic downturns. Unlike discretionary one-time purchases, active subscriptions tend to persist even when consumers tighten budgets in other categories.
What This Means for Consumers
The proliferation of subscriptions has created subscription fatigue. The average household now tracks 4-7 active digital subscriptions, and many consumers report losing track of what they are paying for.
Services that emerged to help manage this complexity — subscription trackers, cancellation services, bundle aggregators — represent a new layer of the ecosystem. Some platforms have made "one click to cancel" a key selling point.