The news: Audioboom agreed to acquire Adelicious, potentially creating the UK’s largest homegrown podcast network with 125 million monthly downloads, per Podnews. The deal will cement Audioboom’s expansion and amplify its global reach through Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and other major platforms.
Audioboom features top shows like No Such Thing as a Fish, Dig It, and the official Formula 1 Beyond the Grid podcast. Adelicious brings over 200 popular podcasts to the fold, including Five Brilliant Things, Short History Of …, The Teen Commandments, and History Extra.
The merger is likely a reaction to Platform Media, Listen Entertainment, and Goldhawk Productions merging in April to form the UK’s leading content supergroup.
The trend: With the global podcast industry undergoing rapid consolidation, mergers like iHeart-Pushkin in 2020, Tencent-Ximalaya in April, and now Audioboom-Adelicious are creating fewer—but far larger—networks for wider reach.
For advertisers, this shift has major implications:
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Larger networks = global scale. Audioboom-Adelicious now reaches 40 million listeners, iHeartRadio has more than 188 million registered users, and Tencent’s Ximalaya dominates with 300 million users.
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Streamlined buying. Fewer gatekeepers and standardized ad formats could mean simpler media planning.
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Premium inventory. Mergers often target quality content producers, boosting the concentration of high-value, brand-safe shows.
Key stat: 78% of US advertisers are actively advertising in podcasting, per Cumulus Media and Signal Hill Insights, making podcast networks attractive targets for campaigns because of their expanded reach and variety of topic coverage.
Weighing risks and rewards: Podcast consolidation brings reach—but also tradeoffs. With fewer independent players, pricing power shifts to platforms.
- Advertisers may find rates rising and flexibility shrinking, especially for premium inventory.
- Brands used to direct creator deals may also face new gatekeepers, limiting customization options.
Our take: As podcasting shifts from a fragmented space to a few dominant networks, smaller creators risk losing ad revenue and visibility.
Advertisers that balance buys across major platforms and independent shows will stretch their budgets further—and stay closer to engaged, loyal audiences.