Micro-Drama Market Ex-China Projected to Top $9 Billion

The micro-drama market outside of China is projected to generate revenues of $9.5 billion in 2030, a compound annual growth rate of more than 28 percent from 2024, according to Media Partners Asia (MPA), while revenues in China are on track to top $16 billion.

The Micro-Drama Economy indicates that revenues in China from micro-dramas climbed to $7 billion in 2024 and are expected to top $16.2 billion by 2030. This year, micro-drama revenues will surpass China’s domestic box office. MPA projects that more than 830 million viewers are consuming micro-dramas, with 60 percent paying for access. The market is led by ByteDance (Red Fruit), Tencent (WeChat Video Accounts) and Kuaishou (Xi Fan), delivering titles from leading players such as COL, China Literature and Tomato Novel. Advertising will account for 56 percent of revenues by 2030, with subscriptions at 39 percent and commerce at 5 percent. Marking a new stage in micro-dramas’ growth, budgets are on the rise in China, with premium titles budgeted at between $400,000 and $600,000.

Ex-China, revenues will be subscription-led, at 74 percent, with advertising at 25 percent and commerce at just 1 percent. The U.S. is the most lucrative territory, with revenues hitting $819 million in 2024 and rising to $3.8 billion by 2030. Affluent, urban women aged 30 to 60 are leading micro-drama adoption in the U.S. Key players include DramaBox, which reported a profit in 2024, and ReelShort.

Outside of the U.S., MPA identifies Japan and India as key territories. Japan micro-drama revenues are projected to hit $1.2 billion in 2030. Southeast Asia and Indonesia also hold strong growth potential.

Vivek Couto, executive director of MPA, said: “Micro-dramas have evolved from a niche experiment to a multi-billion-dollar global category. Production is cheap, but distribution is costly, and success depends on speed, scale and repeatable IP. China’s ecosystem shows what’s possible when content is integrated into social and payments rails, while the U.S. is proving the viability of global expansion. Markets such as Japan, Korea, India, Southeast Asia, and Latin America are emerging. The winners will be operators that control their distribution and monetization infrastructure, manage customer acquisition costs, and build sustainable IP pipelines.”