WWE Raw remains in Netflix global top 10 with increase in viewership

Penta | WWE

WWE’s top ten run in the Netflix global rankings continued with last week’s Elimination Chamber fallout episode of Raw.

The March 2 broadcast brought in a reported three million global views and 5.4 million global hours viewed according to Netflix’s weekly Tudum metrics, placing it tied for fifth in global views among all shows in the world for the last seven days.

It finished third overall in the United States, one of 23 countries where it made the top 10. It’s also been in the global top ten for five straight weeks after a spotty December/January stretch.

The views were up by 200,000 from the prior week while the global hours viewed was down by 200,000.

The show featured a confrontation between WWE WrestleMania 42 headliners CM Punk and Roman Reigns ahead of next month’s event in addition to Penta challenging and defeating Dominik Mysterio for the Intercontinental title.

The show had a listed runtime of 1:41.

The fourth season of Bridgerton remained in the top spot overall with 13.1 million global views and 116.4 million global hours viewed over its six week run in the top ten. The first season of The Dinosaurs was second after its premiere with 10.4 million global views and 32.3 million global hours viewed.

Last reported 10 weeks of WWE Raw on Netflix viewership:

Episode dateGlobal ViewsGlobal Hours
March 2, 20263.0 million5.4 million
February 23, 20262.8 million5.6 million
February 16, 20262.7 million4.9 million
February 9, 20262.9 million5.1 million
February 2, 20263.1 million5.8 million
January 19, 20262.5 million4.6 million
January 5, 20263.2 million5.9 million
December 8, 20252.5 million4.4 million
November 17, 20253.1 million5.8 million
November 10, 20252.8 million5.1 million
Average for last 10 weeks of charted shows:2.86 million5.26 million
Josh Nason
Josh Nason

Since 2011, Josh has been a contributing editor to Wrestling Observer/F4WOnline.com and also hosts the Punch-Out podcast. He has also written for Fight Magazine, Bloody Elbow, Bleacher Report, and other websites. He's a 2000 graduate of the University of Maine, worked in pro sports, and once was an indie ring announcer.