New industry data shows that video podcasts are acting as the entry point for listeners who later switch to audio-only versions, reshaping how spoken-word content is discovered in 2026 and beyond. This shift matters for creators, brands and platforms that want to meet audiences where they already are: scrolling, watching and engaging across social media and video platforms.
According to Edison Research, a striking 72% of new podcast listeners, and 68% of long-time listeners, report that they started listening to the audio version of a podcast after first discovering it in video form.
Traditionally, platforms like Spotify and Apple Podcasts were home base for audio podcasts. But today’s content consumption patterns are driven by visual engagement first: YouTube, Instagram, TikTok and similar video-centric platforms are where many people encounter podcast conversations for the first time. Once they’ve been drawn in visually, they’re far more likely to follow the same podcast in audio-only formats elsewhere.
Video versions of podcasts give people a chance to sample a show before committing to long-form audio listening, especially for a generation used to scrolling short- and medium-length visual content online
Here are three benefits of video-first podcasts to complement the full audio versions:
Humans rely significantly on visual cues for information processing, both consciously and subconsciously. We don’t just hear voices, we watch faces, gestures and the subtle dance of communication that takes place beyond words. Seeing hosts and guests together on screen enables audiences to pick up on micro-expressions like eye contact, body language, humour, hesitation, and laughter. These non-verbal cues build trust, context and emotional connection in ways audio alone can’t always achieve.
Media platforms themselves are acknowledging the extent of engagement surrounding podcast content. For example, Spotify has observed enormous spikes in podcast listenership around major cultural events, including a reported +172 % increase in sports podcast consumption leading up to the Super Bowl weekend, followed by an even larger +358 % surge in the days after.
These data points are a reminder that brands and creators who want to thrive in podcasting need to do more than just release episodes. They must engage audiences in the broader discourse by contributing meaningfully to the conversations that happen around them.
Perfectly timed captions and on-screen transcripts enable people with hearing impairments to follow conversations with precision. For many others, captions are a daily convenience that allows viewers to follow podcasts while muted in public spaces or without audio data. In this sense, video podcasts act as an accessible archive of spoken knowledge that accommodates different learning and engagement styles.
Audio will always be a staple of podcasting, but video serves as the front door through which many listeners now walk. By meeting audiences in the visual spaces they already inhabit, whether on YouTube, Instagram or TikTok, creators open up a much wider engagement funnel that leads back to audio platforms and deeper long-form listening.
Summary of the Statistics on Video Podcast as Discover Engines |
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Metric |
Statistic |
Source |
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New Listeners starting with Video |
72% |
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Long-time Listeners starting with Video |
68% |
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Post-Super Bowl Sports Podcast Surge |
+358% |
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At Tim Africa, we share video clips, full episodes, and highlight reels that tap into the visual habits of today’s audiences.
What’s more is that we don’t cut out the human elements of conversation. We keep laughter, stammers, self-corrections and all the small, imperfect features that make dialogue real. Much of what makes a conversation engaging is the non-verbal cues that reveal intention, hesitation, and synergy between speakers.
By preserving these moments, our podcasts mirror the way real conversations unfold. This approach acknowledges unedited human presence captured on video is part of what draws audiences in and keeps them listening.
You can watch or listen to our podcasts on any one of your favourite social media or streaming platforms