Published by AKTR andTelecomDaily, the total includes in Crimea, which was annexed by Russia earlier this year.
Tricolor TV remained the leading provider of services, with 10.56 million subscribers and a 29% market share.
It was followed by Rostelecom (7.7 million) and ER Telecom (2.65 million), with the three claiming a combined market share of 51%.
The top seven providers meanwhile had a combined market share of 77%.
The DTH platform Orion Express was the star performer in H1, growing its subscriber base by 71%, compared to an average of 10-11% recorded by other pay-TV companies.
Only one provider – MTS – saw its subscriber total decrease, in Q1 rather than H1, though at the same time its ARPU increased by 5% year-on-year.
Moscow remains a unique market in the pay-TV sector, with the number of subscribers exceeding the number of households. At the same time, the five leading providers of pay-TV service claimed a combined market share of 97%.
Although cable remains the main method of reception of pay-TV in Russia, accounting for 50% of subscribers, take-up of DTH and satellite is growing faster.
Indeed, by 2018 they will account for 40% and 12% of subscribers respectively, with cable falling to 48%.
By then, pay-TV penetration will stand at over 72%.
TelecomDaily notes that growth in pay-TV has generally slowed in Russia. It also puts the subscriber total as 35.5 million as of the end of June.
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