Most people assume news channels exist to inform the public. That is partly true. But understanding how news channels earn money reveals a business model that is more layered than most viewers realize. Advertising, TRP ratings, sponsorships, subscription fees, and content licensing all feed into a channel’s revenue. Each stream works differently, and each one shapes what ends up on your screen.
Advertising: The Biggest Revenue Source
Advertising is the primary way news channels make money. Brands pay channels to broadcast their commercials during breaks. The price an advertiser pays depends on two things: the time slot and the audience size.
Prime time slots on major Hindi news channels, typically between 8 PM and 11 PM, command the highest rates. Channels with larger, more engaged audiences charge more per second of airtime. A 10-second ad on a top-rated news channel during a live election broadcast, for instance, can cost several times more than the same slot on a weekday afternoon.
Advertisers do not buy airtime blindly. They use TRP data to decide where their money goes
What TRP Actually Is and Why It Controls Revenue
TRP stands for Television Rating Point. It measures how many people from a target audience watched a specific channel or programme during a given period.
In India, BARC (Broadcast Audience Research Council) calculates TRP. BARC installs BAR-O-meters in a sample of roughly 40,000 impanelled households. These devices record what is being watched, when, and for how long. That sample data is then extrapolated to estimate national viewership across India’s 197 million TV-owning households. BARC releases updated rankings every Thursday.
The connection to money is direct. A news channel with consistently high TRPs can charge more per ad slot. A channel with low TRPs must discount its rates to attract advertisers. This means TRP is not just a popularity metric. It is, as a 2025 research paper in the International Journal of Research Publication and Reviews described it, a “currency of attention” that directly controls how much advertising revenue a channel earns.
This dynamic also shapes content. Channels that want higher TRPs tend to program louder debates, breaking news alerts, and high-drama panel discussions during prime time. The editorial choices often follow the money.
Sponsorships and Brand Integrations
Sponsorship is a separate revenue stream from standard advertising. Here, a brand does not just buy a 10-second break. Instead, it associates its name directly with a show or segment.
You see this in three common formats. First, programme sponsorships, where a brand’s name appears in the show title or before and after each segment. Second, branded content segments, where a company funds a specific topic discussion or report that fits its marketing goals. Third, ticker and on-screen sponsorships, where a brand’s logo runs continuously along the news ticker during a broadcast block.
Sponsorship rates for major national shows on channels like Aaj Tak, NDTV, or Republic TV run considerably higher than standard ad rates because they offer exclusivity and repeated brand exposure across an entire episode.
Subscription Fees and Carriage Deals
News channels also earn from the distribution ecosystem. DTH operators and cable networks pay channels either a subscription fee per subscriber or a carriage fee to carry the channel on their platform.
Free-to-air channels recover costs entirely from advertising and skip this route. Pay channels receive a share of what viewers pay for their monthly TV packages. BARC data indicates that India’s television advertising market generated over Rs 29,400 crore in recent years. Even so, subscription revenues add a meaningful secondary income, particularly for English-language news channels with smaller but higher-income urban audiences.
Content Licensing and Digital Revenue
News channels also license their footage and programmes to other broadcasters, streaming platforms, and international networks. A viral clip from a major breaking news event, for example, carries commercial value beyond its original broadcast.
On top of this, most major news channels now run parallel YouTube channels and digital platforms. These generate ad revenue through Google’s AdSense model, based on views and watch time. NDTV, Aaj Tak, India Today TV, and Republic TV all operate large digital operations that contribute separately to total group revenue.
The Real Tension in the Model
The deeper issue in how news channels earn money is the conflict between editorial independence and commercial pressure. When TRP directly controls revenue, channels face pressure to prioritize viewership over accuracy. The 2020 TRP manipulation scandal in India, which led to BARC suspending ratings for three months and implicated multiple broadcasters, showed how far that pressure can push.
Television advertising revenue in India has also been declining. A 2025 article in The Print reported that TV ad revenues fell from Rs 33,400 crore to Rs 29,400 crore in two years. As digital advertising grows, channels are restructuring their revenue models to stay viable. The business of news is shifting, even as its basic mechanics remain the same.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is the main source of income for news channels?
Advertising is the largest revenue source for news channels. Channels sell airtime to brands, with rates determined by TRP ratings and time slots. Prime time slots on high-TRP channels command the highest ad rates. Secondary sources include sponsorships, subscription or carriage fees from DTH operators, content licensing, and digital advertising revenue from platforms like YouTube.
2. How does TRP affect the revenue of a news channel?
TRP directly determines how much a news channel can charge advertisers. BARC calculates TRP in India using BAR-O-meters installed in around 40,000 sample households, extrapolating data to represent national viewership. Channels with consistently high TRPs command premium ad rates. Channels with low TRPs must discount their rates. This makes TRP one of the most commercially consequential metrics in the television industry.
3. Do news channels earn money from YouTube and digital platforms?
Yes. Most major Indian news channels operate parallel YouTube channels that generate ad revenue through Google’s AdSense model based on video views and watch time. Channels like NDTV, Aaj Tak, and Republic TV have built large digital audiences that contribute separately to total group revenue, reducing dependence on traditional TV advertising as the broader TV ad market faces declining growth.