
Chinese drama viewers are not known for their high completion rates
Now, I have to admit I am not great at finishing Chinese dramas myself. Not when I have over 30 C-dramas hanging in limbo that I do plan on finishing, but haven’t done yet.
But.. according to data out of China, I am not as bad at completing C-dramas than most Chinese viewers, as at least I haven’t actually dropped them. I’m just taking my sweet time finishing them.
That recent data shows a much lower percentage of Chinese viewers complete dramas than, I would guess, non-Chinese viewers who, at least from data on sites like My Drama List (MDL), seem to do a better job at finishing what they start.
Here then is the data for the completion rate for C-dramas by Chinese viewers. And, yep, it is far far lower than I would have guessed.

What percentage of Chinese viewers actually finish a C-drama?
Based on industry data from major platforms and C-drama executives, the completion rate for Chinese dramas is very low.
For a “good” drama, for instance, only about 20% of viewers will watch it all the way through.
For one that is deemed “a flop”, that completion rate drops to only 10% of viewers (word of mouth does have an impact, obviously).
Even worse, a very high percentage of viewers do not get beyond Episode 5 in the majority of dramas.
RELATED: What percentage of Chinese viewers watch C-dramas on a faster speed than normal?
Here then is the detailed breakdown from different stages of viewing, which vary depending on the experience of the executive talking about it and the platforms the dramas stream on:
| Viewing Stage | Data Point | Context / Source |
|---|---|---|
| First Episode | Over 50% of viewers do not return for Episode 2 | Re: a 2025 comment by iQIYI CEO Gong Yu. Even “great” works see a 40% drop after Ep 1. |
| Early Drop-off | Approximately 40% of viewers quit within the first 3 episodes | 2019 data from Tencent Video (known as “7 Golden Minutes, 3 Life-or-Death Episodes“) |
| 5-Episode Test | Over 50% stop watching by the 5th episode | Youku VP Xie Ying (2024). |
| Full Completion | Approximately 20% for successful shows | iQIYI CEO Gong Yu (2025). “Flop” shows see less than 10%. |
As you will see from the table, according to an iQIYI executive, 40-50 percent of Chinese viewers watching shows on iQIYI have stopped watching by the end of Episode 1.
According to a Tencent Video executive, the drop rate on his platform is a solid 40 percent by the end of Episode 3, while a YOUKU executive points out the drop rate on their platform climbs to over 50% just two episodes later.
More viewers then drop the series as each new episode is premiered from Episode 5 onwards.
By the time a Chinese drama reaches its end, that usually leaves only 20 percent of those who started watching having stuck with it through till its close. The other 80 percent for almost every drama are long gone.
If the drama is thought of as “a flop”, that 20 percent than drops to a pitiful 10 percent.
Abysmal numbers indeed, aren’t they? And why is that?

Too much choice and poor attention spans
Of course, the drop rate has been high in China for some time as, with so many dramas releasing every month over the last decade or so, there is always something potentially better to watch if the first episode of your latest choice isn’t quite hitting the spot.
As mini dramas have also become popular in China, the rate of drop-off for a typical 30-plus episode regular series has become even higher as viewers’ attention spans are shortening even further with every coming year.
One executive even pointed out that the typical attention span of a viewer had dropped from two minutes just a few years ago, to only 47 seconds today!
That means, if a new C-drama isn’t able to grab a viewer’s attention in that first 47 seconds of Episode 1 then, chances are it’s not going to.
That also leaves me wondering, if most Chinese viewers have moved onto something else by the second half of every drama, why is there currently a new push by some production companies for dramas to feature more than 40 episodes, and sometimes over 50 episodes?
Especially when very few of their viewers will ever get remotely close to that completing something that long?
I just don’t get it, do you?
