Outdoor televisions gain ground as Americans invest in backyard living

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Outdoor televisions gain ground as Americans invest in backyard living

As Americans spend elevated amounts of money on home remodeling and outdoor living spaces, the backyard is taking on a new role. Imagine a summer evening with neighbors gathered around a patio television to watch the 2026 FIFA World Cup, turning what was once a yard into an extension of the living room.

Outdoor televisions were once largely a commercial product installed in hotels, sports bars and stadiums because the environment required them. Today, they are increasingly common in private homes. Residential backyards and patios now account for roughly 42% of global outdoor TV installations, according to Business Research Insights, and the products have become a recurring presence on home renovation programming, including HGTV's "Rock the Block."

Sylvox dove into outdoor television purchasing trends and explained the reasons for the increasing demand.

The numbers behind the backyard boom

The market data bears out the shift in outdoor TV trends. Grand View Research valued the global outdoor TV market at $443 million in 2024 and projects it could reach more than $750 million by 2030, with North America representing the largest share of demand.

In the United States, outdoor television use has historically centered on the NFL season, college football Saturdays and summer baseball. The 2026 FIFA World Cup is adding a new dimension to that pattern. Research firm Omdia forecasts global television shipments will reach 210 million units this year as households upgrade ahead of the tournament, a broader wave of consumer spending that outdoor television manufacturers expect to share in.

Consumer research points in the same direction. According to market research firm ReAnIn, nearly 41% of outdoor television buyers consider the products essential for social gatherings and events; the firm also found that adoption has increased 37% since 2025.

The financial logic of staying put

The interest in outdoor entertainment sits within a broader shift in how Americans think about and use their homes, shaped in part by a locked-up housing market.

In 2024, soaring prices and stubbornly high mortgage rates combined to produce the most immobile American housing market on record, with the household mobility rate falling to 11.2%, according to Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies. The median single-family home price reached nearly five times the median household income.

Faced with the financial logic of staying put, many homeowners have turned their attention inward, or rather, outward into their yards.

That decision has been reflected in spending. Harvard’s JCHS estimates homeowner remodeling expenditures reached $524 billion in early 2026, a new record, with a growing share directed toward backyards and outdoor areas. According to a 2026 WifiTalents industry report, about 4 out of 5 American homeowners say they are more interested in upgrading their outdoor spaces than they were before 2020.

The distinction between aesthetic and functional investment is meaningful. Many homeowners are not simply pursuing more attractive yards, but more usable ones. A 2024 Houzz survey found that 1 in 3 homeowners renovating outdoor areas cited creating additional living space as their primary objective; among Gen X respondents, that figure rose to 41% and to 38% among millennials. Pergolas, fire pits and outdoor televisions were among the most frequently cited additions.

The outdoor living room takes shape

Industry analysts have taken to calling this trend the "outdoor living room," a space conceived not merely to look appealing from the kitchen window, but to be used for game days, pool parties and playoff nights. In Sun Belt states like Florida, Texas and Arizona, where mild winters allow for outdoor use across much of the year, adoption has been especially strong.

The shift in intent matters because it changes what the space requires. A traditional backyard demands relatively little infrastructure: a lawn, a patio, and somewhere to sit. An outdoor living room requires something closer to what a living room actually contains: ambient lighting, comfortable seating, a sound system, and, increasingly, a screen.

The technology following the trend

Not long ago, those who wanted to watch a game outside faced a limited set of options: spend serious money on commercial-grade hardware or drag an indoor set onto the patio and squint at it in the sunlight.

The underlying engineering challenge is brightness. Standard indoor televisions operate at between 250 and 500 nits of luminance, sufficient for a dim living room but no match for direct sunlight, which causes the image to wash out almost completely. Contemporary outdoor models typically deliver 1,500 to 3,000 nits, roughly four to six times the output of a standard indoor screen, and enough to remain clearly visible even under the midday sun in cities like Phoenix.

Contemporary outdoor sets are also engineered to withstand rain, dust and significant temperature variation. Many incorporate audio systems tuned specifically for open-air environments, where sound disperses far more quickly than it does indoors. It is a practical consideration for anyone who has tried to follow game commentary in a noisy backyard.

Those capabilities are no longer limited to a narrow segment of the market. The technology that defined early outdoor television offerings from brands such as Samsung's The Terrace and SunBriteTV has gradually become available across a broader range of price points.

Taking it outside

Three conditions that have driven outdoor television adoption: economic pressure to invest in existing homes, rising demand for functional outdoor space, and a home-centric consumer mindset. None of them shows any sign of abating.

This summer, millions of families will gather to watch the World Cup, NFL preseason games, and whatever comes on after the grill goes off. Some will do so the familiar way, crowded around a screen indoors. But a rising share will move the viewing outside, out into open-air backyards. And their displays will be purpose-built for the outdoors.

This story was produced by Sylvox and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

 

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Outdoor televisions gain ground as Americans invest in backyard living

Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

Outdoor televisions gain ground as Americans invest in backyard living

As Americans spend elevated amounts of money on home remodeling and outdoor living spaces, the backyard is taking on a new role. Imagine a summer evening with neighbors gathered around a patio television to watch the 2026 FIFA World Cup, turning what was once a yard into an extension of the living room.

Outdoor televisions were once largely a commercial product installed in hotels, sports bars and stadiums because the environment required them. Today, they are increasingly common in private homes. Residential backyards and patios now account for roughly 42% of global outdoor TV installations, according to Business Research Insights, and the products have become a recurring presence on home renovation programming, including HGTV's "Rock the Block."

Sylvox dove into outdoor television purchasing trends and explained the reasons for the increasing demand.

The numbers behind the backyard boom

The market data bears out the shift in outdoor TV trends. Grand View Research valued the global outdoor TV market at $443 million in 2024 and projects it could reach more than $750 million by 2030, with North America representing the largest share of demand.

In the United States, outdoor television use has historically centered on the NFL season, college football Saturdays and summer baseball. The 2026 FIFA World Cup is adding a new dimension to that pattern. Research firm Omdia forecasts global television shipments will reach 210 million units this year as households upgrade ahead of the tournament, a broader wave of consumer spending that outdoor television manufacturers expect to share in.

Consumer research points in the same direction. According to market research firm ReAnIn, nearly 41% of outdoor television buyers consider the products essential for social gatherings and events; the firm also found that adoption has increased 37% since 2025.

The financial logic of staying put

The interest in outdoor entertainment sits within a broader shift in how Americans think about and use their homes, shaped in part by a locked-up housing market.

In 2024, soaring prices and stubbornly high mortgage rates combined to produce the most immobile American housing market on record, with the household mobility rate falling to 11.2%, according to Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies. The median single-family home price reached nearly five times the median household income.

Faced with the financial logic of staying put, many homeowners have turned their attention inward, or rather, outward into their yards.

That decision has been reflected in spending. Harvard’s JCHS estimates homeowner remodeling expenditures reached $524 billion in early 2026, a new record, with a growing share directed toward backyards and outdoor areas. According to a 2026 WifiTalents industry report, about 4 out of 5 American homeowners say they are more interested in upgrading their outdoor spaces than they were before 2020.

The distinction between aesthetic and functional investment is meaningful. Many homeowners are not simply pursuing more attractive yards, but more usable ones. A 2024 Houzz survey found that 1 in 3 homeowners renovating outdoor areas cited creating additional living space as their primary objective; among Gen X respondents, that figure rose to 41% and to 38% among millennials. Pergolas, fire pits and outdoor televisions were among the most frequently cited additions.

The outdoor living room takes shape

Industry analysts have taken to calling this trend the "outdoor living room," a space conceived not merely to look appealing from the kitchen window, but to be used for game days, pool parties and playoff nights. In Sun Belt states like Florida, Texas and Arizona, where mild winters allow for outdoor use across much of the year, adoption has been especially strong.

The shift in intent matters because it changes what the space requires. A traditional backyard demands relatively little infrastructure: a lawn, a patio, and somewhere to sit. An outdoor living room requires something closer to what a living room actually contains: ambient lighting, comfortable seating, a sound system, and, increasingly, a screen.

The technology following the trend

Not long ago, those who wanted to watch a game outside faced a limited set of options: spend serious money on commercial-grade hardware or drag an indoor set onto the patio and squint at it in the sunlight.

The underlying engineering challenge is brightness. Standard indoor televisions operate at between 250 and 500 nits of luminance, sufficient for a dim living room but no match for direct sunlight, which causes the image to wash out almost completely. Contemporary outdoor models typically deliver 1,500 to 3,000 nits, roughly four to six times the output of a standard indoor screen, and enough to remain clearly visible even under the midday sun in cities like Phoenix.

Contemporary outdoor sets are also engineered to withstand rain, dust and significant temperature variation. Many incorporate audio systems tuned specifically for open-air environments, where sound disperses far more quickly than it does indoors. It is a practical consideration for anyone who has tried to follow game commentary in a noisy backyard.

Those capabilities are no longer limited to a narrow segment of the market. The technology that defined early outdoor television offerings from brands such as Samsung's The Terrace and SunBriteTV has gradually become available across a broader range of price points.

Taking it outside

Three conditions that have driven outdoor television adoption: economic pressure to invest in existing homes, rising demand for functional outdoor space, and a home-centric consumer mindset. None of them shows any sign of abating.

This summer, millions of families will gather to watch the World Cup, NFL preseason games, and whatever comes on after the grill goes off. Some will do so the familiar way, crowded around a screen indoors. But a rising share will move the viewing outside, out into open-air backyards. And their displays will be purpose-built for the outdoors.

This story was produced by Sylvox and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

 

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