The first official Starfleet Academy Nielsen ratings are now in — and the numbers paint a bleak picture for Paramount+’s latest attempt to expand the Star Trek television universe.
According to newly released Nielsen streaming data covering the show’s premiere tracking window, Starfleet Academy failed to chart in the Top 10 Originals entirely. That absence is significant on its own, but the context surrounding the debut makes the performance even more concerning for Paramount’s flagship franchise play.

Nielsen Ratings for the Starfleet Academy Debut week – Nielsen
This wasn’t a single-episode launch quietly testing the waters.
Paramount rolled out Starfleet Academy with a two-episode premiere — a strategy specifically designed to inflate total minutes viewed and generate early momentum. Even with that built-in advantage, the series couldn’t break into Nielsen’s Originals rankings during its debut week.
The 343 Million Minute Benchmark
To understand the scale of the miss, it’s important to look at the entry threshold.
The #10 original on the Nielsen chart for that week — Run Away — logged 343 million minutes viewed. That figure represents the minimum performance required just to appear on the list.

Robert Picardo as The Doctor in Star Trek: Starfleet Academy – Paramount
Now compare that to Starfleet Academy’s available content at launch.
The two premiere episodes combined totaled roughly 135 minutes of runtime.
Here’s what the math looks like:
343,000,000 minutes required ÷ 135 minutes of content = 2.54 million full two-episode view-throughs
In other words, it would have taken approximately 2.5 million complete watches just to reach the Nielsen Top 10 floor.

A screenshot from Star Trek Starfleet Academy – YouTube, Paramount Plus
Break that down further:
That equals roughly 1.27 million full viewers per episode (assuming audiences watched both installments start to finish).
And yet, despite the brand recognition of Star Trek, a marketing push, and a dual-episode premiere, the show couldn’t clear even that baseline threshold.
A Weak Platform Debut
The Nielsen miss wasn’t the only warning sign.
On Paramount+’s own internal charts, Starfleet Academy reportedly debuted at #3 — already a modest showing for what was positioned as a major franchise tentpole.
The trajectory worsened quickly.

Paramount+ Top Originals for January 24, 2026 – FlixPatrol
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Within days, the series slid off the platform’s Top 10 list entirely, overtaken by legacy catalog content including reruns of Sabrina the Teenage Witch and The King of Queens.
Since then, the show has reportedly reappeared briefly when new episodes drop, only to vanish again shortly after — a pattern suggesting front-loaded curiosity rather than sustained engagement.

Paramount+ Top Originals for February 13, 2026 – FlixPatrol
If viewership were building through word of mouth or binge discovery, the opposite trend would likely be occurring, especially as more episodes are added.
Ratings Implications
While Nielsen does not release full household ratings equivalents for every streaming title, minutes viewed can be used as a performance proxy.
Given the failure to reach the 343-million-minute chart floor — even with two episodes contributing to the total — the premiere week audience footprint appears modest at best.

A screenshot from the trailer to Star Trek Starfleet Academy – YouTube, Paramount Pictures
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Industry modeling based on comparable minutes-viewed conversions suggests the show likely struggled to reach even a 1.2 household-equivalent rating in premiere engagement.
For a franchise launch tied to one of Paramount’s most recognizable IPs, that’s a soft opening by any streaming metric.
Marketing Push Falls Flat
Paramount also attempted an aggressive promotional strategy by releasing the first episode free on YouTube to drive awareness and subscriptions.
Instead of generating buzz, the move created additional negative optics.

The YouTube viewership numbers for Star Trek: Starfleet Academy on YouTube as of January 24, 2026 at 9:40 a.m. – YouTube, Paramount Plus
Public metrics before the video was privatized showed relatively low view counts paired with a heavily skewed like-to-dislike ratio — signaling a divided or disengaged audience response rather than breakout enthusiasm.
The episode was later pulled from public view, removing visible engagement metrics from the platform.
A Franchise Under Pressure
The stakes for Starfleet Academy extend beyond a single series performance.
Paramount+ is operating in an increasingly competitive streaming environment where franchise IP is expected to drive subscriptions, not struggle out of the gate.

A screenshot from the trailer to Star Trek Starfleet Academy – YouTube, Paramount Pictures
Star Trek has long been positioned as one of the service’s cornerstone brands — a library spanning decades of television and film. New entries are expected to generate momentum, cultural conversation, and sustained viewership.
Instead, the Starfleet Academy Nielsen ratings debut suggests a muted launch cycle.
No Top 10 Originals placement, a failure to reach the chart’s minutes-viewed floor, weak internal platform rankings, and rapid drop-off after premiere curiosity.
Taken together, the data points toward a series that has yet to find meaningful audience traction.

A promotional image of a Klingon male wearing a skirt in Star Trek: Starfleet Academy – X, @Ciaranredokeefe
Whether viewership stabilizes or continues to slide will become clearer as additional Nielsen tracking windows are released — but as first impressions go, this was not the launch Paramount+ was hoping for.
What do you think of these Starfleet Academy Nielsen Ratings? Sound off in the comments and let us know!
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“…overtaken by legacy catalog content…” I like it; what a classy way to say Paramount’s garbage ‘Star Trek’ show got thrashed by 30 year old reruns…
This is all on purpose. They hate real TruTrek fans and they know darn well any respecting fan wouldn’t touch anything in the DisgraceryVerse with a 10 foot pain stick and especially this garbage.
Paramount kills their Golden Goose by pushing Taylor Sheridan to NBC, while continuing to prop up the systemic failure that is KurtzmanTrek.
There’s still time to cancel season 2. Let’s get on that Ellison before you have to retire the IP entirely.
Nobody likes S.A.M. – Smiley Annoying Mongoloid??
Why would anyone ever want to watch that… thing in that screenshot for any period of time?
Independent YouTubers get tons more views than this, for shows that cost the price of a video editor, or something.
These DEI shows are pathetic. Their goal, though, is to destroy the legacy of White shows, and they succeed at that.
“That equals roughly 1.27 million full viewers per episode (assuming audiences watched both installments start to finish).”
Your math is bad and unnecessary.
135 minutes divided by 2 = 67.5 minutes episode average.
67.5 minutes multiplied by 1.27 million viewers = 87,725,000 minutes
Multiply the 87,725,000 minutes by 2 episodes and we get = 171.45 million minutes.
Multiply that by 2 to correct your incorrect assumption and bad math and we get 343 million minutes.
In other words:
It needed 2.54 million unique viewers to sit through both episodes to break the chart.
Your 1.27 million viewers is just… wrong.
[…] to crack Nielsen’s top 10 streaming originals list, even the two-episode premiere, according to That Park Place, which has also catalogued the Paramount+ rankings – the title generally appearing in tenth place […]