The Numbers Business Report: our official forecast for 2026

December 2, 2025

With the Holiday season in full bloom, we’re excited to bring our own cheerful news by announcing our first complete market forecast for 2026 at the box office. Thank you to all of our supporters, and especially our subscribers to The Numbers Business Report, who make this work possible.

The North American theatrical business is expected to log another year of steady recovery in 2026. According to our first complete market forecast, box-office receipts are projected to reach $9.8 billion, a 10% increase on the anticipated 2025 total of $8.87 billion, marking the first time the market has surpassed $9 billion since 2019, according to our figures.

Blockbusters will still do much of the heavy lifting. Ten films are projected to surpass $200 million domestically, with their combined takings expected to reach $3.60 billion, only marginally below the $3.75 billion generated by the 200‑million‑plus cohort in 2025. The Super Mario Galaxy, due on April 3, tops the slate with forecast receipts of $550 million.

The more striking story lies in the middle of the market. Mid‑tier wide releases—films playing in 2,000 or more theatres but earning under $200 million—are forecast to generate $4.57 billion, up 10% year on year. Films in this category include The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping and Dune: Messiah at the end of the year.

The model also assumes $600 million in box office from as‑yet‑unannounced films that will fill out the 2026 release schedule, an allowance based on 2025’s pattern of 44 wide releases added and 10 removed since last November.

Limited and specialty releases—titles never playing in more than 2,000 theatres—are predicted to contribute $404 million, a 9% increase. This slice of the market carries clear upside as a new generation of distributors, including Black Bear, Row K, MUBI and Cineverse, plan to scale their theatrical operations.

Limited‑engagement re‑releases are expected to add roughly $100 million, in line with 2025 but with scope to surprise on the back of “event” returns of library titles, while holdovers from 2025—among them Wicked: For Good, Zootopia 2 and Avatar: Fire and Ash—are projected to contribute a further $534 million.

The forecast is not without risk. A broader economic slowdown could sap consumer spending; renewed labour unrest, particularly around the use of AI in production, could disrupt pipelines; and strategic shifts linked to a potential Warner Bros. Discovery sale may alter release patterns. On the other hand, recent history underlines the upside from surprise hits: in 2025, A Minecraft Movie and Lilo & Stitch—barely on our radar when we announced our initial predictions—emerged as breakout blockbusters. On balance, under a business‑as‑usual scenario, 2026 looks set for solid, broad‑based expansion rather than a boom, with the market well placed to significantly clear $9 billion for the first time in seven years and a plausible path towards a $10 billion year.

For 2025, it looks like the final number will be within 5% of our original prediction of $9.3 million twelve months ago. That would mark four straight years of being within 5% of the actual year-end total 13 months in advance, and we hope the same for 2026.

To view our prediction more in-depth, and see our movie-by-movie forecasts for all 2026 wide releases, subscribe here.

To take our prediction analysis further, alongside The Business Report, we are now publishing a six-week market theatrical forecast every week. That has day-by-day predictions for all movies in the top 10 and the expected market size over the next 42 days. Subscribers also receive print and digital editions of the Report, and optional forecast spreadsheets and Bankability reports. Click here to subscribe.

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