The news: Roku launched Howdy, a streaming service for just $2.99 per month. It will initially be available through the Roku platform, with further rollout on mobile and beyond in the works.
“Howdy is ad-free and designed to complement, not compete with, premium services. (It’s) a natural step for us at Roku … making (TV) affordable, accessible, and built for how people watch today,” Roku CEO Anthony Wood said in a press release.
Why it matters: Until now, Roku’s streaming business has been entirely funded on the backs of advertising. Offering a direct-to-consumer product could help Roku monetize beyond ads and platform licensing to gain a new revenue stream.
Ad-free structure: At $2.99, Howdy is likely a volume play. It also offers an inexpensive alternative to rivals—Tubi and Pluto don’t offer an ad-free option, and the next-cheapest ad-free streaming option is Apple at $9.99 per month.
- Roku can afford low margins thanks to its scale, existing infrastructure, and content from its Roku Originals library. Partnerships with Lionsgate, Warner Bros. Discovery, and FilmRise also help.
- The company is banking on scale—millions of subscribers adding up to meaningful revenues, especially since Roku already has a massive built-in audience of over 90 million US streaming households.
Why now? Roku’s launch of Howdy is a response to rising consumer frustration with the high cost and ad loads of streaming.
By offering a low-cost, ad-free alternative, Roku targets value-conscious viewers who are saturated with subscriptions but still open to adding more—as long as the price is right.
Value proposition: For consumers frustrated by content spread across platforms—48% of those with 3+ subscriptions cite this as a reason for stacking—Howdy is positioned as a cheap way to explore additional content.
However, growth isn’t guaranteed. Only 9% of adults have six or more subscriptions, signaling a ceiling on wallet share.