Amazon strikes deal with Disney for programmatic ads across Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN
The deal aims to reduce ad repetition and improve targeting accuracy across Disneyâs streaming platforms

Amazon and Disney have struck a deal that gives media buyers more programmatic access to premium streaming inventory. Announced at the Cannes Lions festival in France, the partnership brings Amazonâs demand-side platform (DSP) into Disneyâs Real-Time Ad Exchange, giving advertisers a direct line to ad-tier programming on Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+.
Advertisers using Amazonâs DSP will now be able to buy ad inventory from Disneyâs ad-supported streaming services, using combined audience insights to serve ads. This means media buyers can plan and run ad campaigns across Disneyâs major streaming properties without needing separate contracts or manual buying processes.
What the Disney and Amazon DSP partnership means for advertisers
According to the announcement, advertisers will be able to use Amazonâs commerce and browsing signals alongside Disneyâs viewer and content data.
Advertisers already working with Amazon DSP will have expanded access without the need to manage another platform. Media buyers will be able to access premium ad-supported content on Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+ while leveraging Amazonâs shopper data and Disneyâs first-party viewer insights in one workflow.
For instance, if a consumer frequently browses health products on Amazon and watches fitness-related content on Disney+, an advertiser could create ads using insights from both data sets. This capability is made possible through collaboration between Amazon Publisher Cloud, built on AWS clean room technology, and Disney Compass, the entertainment companyâs proprietary audience graph.
Amazon Ads recently announced a similar partnership with Roku, making Amazonâs DSP the exclusive route for accessing Rokuâs connected TV (CTV) inventory. That deal covers roughly 80 million households in the United States.
The goal of the deal is to boost ad targeting across streaming services
The companies said the partnership also aims to reduce how often the same person sees the same ad across platforms. Frequency capping and cross-platform targeting become easier when advertisers can unify data across commerce and content ecosystems.
The integration could help marketers avoid overexposing consumers to repetitive ads and instead shift toward delivering more relevant messages based on real behavior and interest data.
Matt Barnes, Disney Advertisingâs VP of programmatic sales, said the direct connection between Amazonâs commerce insights and Disneyâs streaming audience signals creates âgreater accessibility to inventory and audience signals that translate into meaningful resultsâ for marketers.
Amazonâs DSP VP, Kelly MacLean, added that the move âbreaks down traditional barriers between content and commerce signalsâ and allows advertisers to create more meaningful experiences for viewers.
Rollout and international reach
Disney plans to roll out this capability gradually, but select advertisers will begin seeing access in the coming months. According to Amazon, "the new integration will be available to all U.S. advertisers that use Amazon DSP beginning in Q3 2025."
Disney also announced that its Disney+ ad-tier inventory is now accessible through Amazon DSP in eight international markets: France, Germany, Italy, Portugal, Spain, Switzerland, Turkey, and the UK. This expansion broadens the reach for advertisers targeting global audiences and aligns with Amazon Adsâ growing footprint in Europe.
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