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SiriusXM and iHeartMedia are in early talks about combining the two companies, according to multiple reports. Irving Azoff, Chairman and CEO of private media and investment firm The Azoff Company, and Apollo Global Management are involved to try and help facilitate a deal.
With terrestrial and satellite radio losing listeners to streaming platforms like Spotify and YouTube, scale becomes a survival strategy.
Sign for iHeartRadio music radio, part of the iHeartMedia company, at the company's local headquarters in the South of Market (SoMa) neighborhood of San Francisco, California. (Photo by Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images)
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iHeartMedia is the largest radio station owner in the U.S., with more than 860 stations in 160 markets, while SiriusXM is the largest satellite radio service, boasting talents deals with the Alex Cooper, Stephen A. Smith and Howard Stern. In recent years, both companies have focused on podcasts as a growth engine amid a decline in radio listenership. iHeartMedia filed for bankruptcy in 2018 and has since been working to mount a turnaround via a combination of revenue growth and a projected $100 million in cost reduction, with shares up about 10% year to date.
Both companies have remained mum on merger talks, with representatives for SiriusXM declining to comment, and Apollo reps not responding at all.
Irving Azoff of Apollo has been a prominent figure in the music industry for decades, managing the Eagles, John Mayer, and U2. He also co-founded the venue management company Oak View Group, and the performing rights organization Global Music Rights. He once served as the CEO of Ticketmaster, where he helped the ticketing company merge with concert promotion giant Live Nation.
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Apollo is a major private equity player in the media landscape. In 2024, the company made a bid for Paramount, which was ultimately acquired by David Ellison.
Combined, iHeart and SiriusXM would exert more dominance across the radio waves, and in the podcasting industry.
SiriusXM is the biggest podcast network in the U.S. and has a roster of shows that include Call Her Daddy, SmartLess, The Mel Robbins Podcast, Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend, MrBallen Podcast and more. iHeartMedia is the third-largest podcast network, with popular shows including My Favorite Murder, The Breakfast Club, Stuff You Should Know, Crime Junkie, The Bobby Bones Show, The Breakfast Club, My Favorite Murder and Las Culturistas.
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While SiriusXM has been concentrating on reducing churn among its satellite radio base, it still expects flat revenue for the upcoming year. However, podcast ad revenue grew over 41% in 2025, after double-digit growth in 2024. iHeartMedia saw a similar growth pattern in its fourth-quarter earnings, with podcast revenue up 24.5% year over year and total revenue up just 0.8%.
On the radio side of the equation, the merger would bring together iHeartMedia’s approximately 860 radio stations and SiriusXM’s music and spoken word channels. SiriusXM says it had around 33 million subscribers as of last year.
In an interview, Tony Onwuchekwa (Tony Doe) is Host of Into The Podverse and Lead Curator of the Nigerian Podcast Index and assesses the merger possibility this way: “A merger between iHeartMedia and SiriusXM would be less about growth and more about staying relevant in a fragmented market. Together, they would combine reach, content, and ad power into a stronger single platform. Separately, they risk further decline as audiences spread across digital ecosystems. In simple terms, they are stronger together because consolidation gives them leverage in a market where control has already shifted elsewhere.”
Amazon acquired podcast network Wondery in late 2020 for roughly $300 million, integrating it into Amazon Music to boost its audio entertainment, particularly against Spotify. In 2025-2026, Amazon shifted strategy, moving Wondery’s narrative content to Audible, laying off staff, and closing the independent Wondery app to focus on creator services and video podcasts.
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The podcast industry has already consolidated through aggressive corporate acquisitions by major platforms like Spotify, Amazon Music, and iHeartMedia, shifting from a fragmented, indie-creator landscape to one dominated by centralized networks. This shift focuses on vertical integration, where platforms control content production, distribution and ad technology to improve profitability.
“Industry consolidation threatens two vested parties,” begins podcast producer Gary Grimes in an interview. “First, the consumer is hurt by weakening competition, which too often means higher prices. Second, smaller, independent podcasters would find it even harder to compete against highly consolidated, vertically integrated industry giants.”
While both parties emphasize that talks are only in their preliminary stage, a possible merger of these two giants bolsters a media industry trend of getting bigger to compete.
The Paramount Skydance Warner Bros. Discovery merger would further consolidate the entertainment industry, possibly eliminating a movie studio, and almost certainly resulting in thousands of layoffs.
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Just last month, Warner Bros. Discovery shareholders approved a merger with Paramount Skydance valued at approximately $111 billion, including debt. The deal, which combines major entertainment assets, received shareholder backing on April 23, with an offer of $31 a share. The acquisition is currently awaiting regulatory approval.
Right now, according to Marketing Dive, Spotify holds an estimated 21%–26% share of U.S. podcast listeners, while iHeartRadio is the number one podcast publisher in the U.S., delivering 180 million monthly downloads, and, as of Q3 2025, SiriusXM Podcast Network leads in average weekly reach, recently overtaking Spotify.
Getting big seems to be a legitimate and sought after survival strategy in media. Of course, multiple questions would stem from the size and scale of such an audio setup, including potential scrutiny from antitrust regulators. Stay tuned.
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