News

YouTube podcasts are big business. In the UK, Acast and Little Dot Studios are vying for a bigger piece.

In the US, podcast ad revenue is projected to soar to $2.5 billion this year. Meanwhile, across the pond, podcaster fortunes are improving as well — and the rich are about to get richer.

Acast, which describes itself as “the world’s largest independent podcast company,” is launching a U.K.-based program that will look to dramatically increase ad opportunities for podcasters on YouTube. In partnership with Little Dot Studios, Acast will work with some of its high-profile show hosts to unlock new revenue streams and closer ties to advertisers.

When the beta version of the program launches in January, it will unite video podcast sponsors with a cohort of U.K. creators that collectively earns 45 million monthly plays. Later in 2026, Acast will expand the program to cover all eligible creators in the U.K. Expansions to other markets are on the horizon as well.

Subscribe for daily Tubefilter Top Stories

Subscribe

The launch partners for the program include some notable names from traditional media — including former footballer Peter Crouch and presenter Fearne Cotton — as well as creators who have built up significant social media followings (such as Abroad in Japan and Tristan Hughes). In total, Acast’s podcast ad marketplace includes 140,000 podcasts and 3,300 advertisers.

“We’ve built the UK’s most technologically-advanced and valuable marketplace for podcast advertising. Now, by unifying our premium audio inventory with immense video scale, Acast

has created the definitive, single-point solution for brands and creators seeking measurable impact,” said Acast Managing Director of UK and Ireland Josh Woodhouse in a statement. “We reach 8 out of 10 podcast fans weekly in the UK, and we are now the largest, fully integrated premium podcast offering in the market.”

Little Dot, which operates more than 135 social channels, will provide the inventory needed to scale up Acast’s YouTube-based program. Both partners are looking to capitalize on the ongoing video podcast surge that has transformed YouTube into one of the industry’s major players.

That trend has emboldened YouTube, leading to the development of new podcast ad formats and data tools. And the Google-owned hub is not the only major platform making those types of moves. TikTok’s iHeartMedia partnership, Netflix’s negotiations with major podcast firms, and Spotify’s syndication of its original programming library have made social video platforms the biggest beneficiaries of the podcast boom.

Now, third-party operators like Acast are looking to claim bigger pieces of the pie. YouTube’s ten-digit podcast audience is one of the industry’s most lucrative assets, and the new accelerator program will bring U.K.-based creators closer to those viewers.

Share
Published by
Sam Gutelle

Recent Posts

Have you heard? Ryan Trahan’s Joyride, NPR’s YouTube hire, and MrBeast’s next big milestone.

Each week, we handpick a selection of stories to give you a snapshot of trends,…

3 days ago

The MLB’s “Players Studio” will turn sluggers into content creators

As the World Cup, NBA Finals, French Open, and Stanley Cup Finals dominate global sports…

3 days ago

Marlene Flowers is a 69-year-old champion bodybuilder. Now she’s sharing the food that helped her get swole.

It's not every day you get flexed on by a grandma. Marlene Flowers was 65…

3 days ago

LinkedIn’s influencer push levels up with launch of Creator Marketplace

LinkedIn is doubling down on its plan to transform its professional social media platform into…

3 days ago

With a live stream of the Pope’s Sagrada Familia visit, TikTok becomes part of history

When architect Antoni Gaudí began working on Barcelona's Sagrada Familia cathedral in 1883, TikTok was…

4 days ago

Tubefilter will be on the ground at Cannes Lions. Here’s where to find us.

Cannes Lions is just over a week away, and not only is Tubefilter returning for…

4 days ago