OOH is growing, but the bigger story is why advertisers continue investing in it.
As digital channels become more crowded and consumer attention becomes harder to capture, brands are placing greater value on media environments tied to real-world behavior. The latest available OAAA data and 2026 industry forecasts suggest that shift is accelerating.
For advertisers, agencies, property owners, and retail media buyers, the takeaway is clear: the physical world is becoming a more flexible, measurable, and valuable part of the modern media mix.
Digital out-of-home continues to help drive that growth. DOOH represented more than 34% of total Q1 2025 OOH spend and grew 9% year over year, reinforcing how digital formats are expanding the category's flexibility, creative potential, and relevance for advertisers.
The 2026 outlook points to continued expansion. Industry forecasts project U.S. OOH spending to top $10 billion in 2026, with digital formats, programmatic buying, and in-store retail media expected to become increasingly important parts of the market.
For years, digital media gave advertisers speed, scale, and targeting. But as feeds become more saturated, brands are looking for channels that can create visibility in the real world, closer to where people live, shop, dine, commute, wait, and make decisions.
That is where OOH and DOOH continue gaining relevance.
DOOH is projected to reach roughly $4 billion in 2026, nearly doubling from 2021 levels. Programmatic OOH is also projected to cross $1 billion, showing that advertisers want the physical-world impact of OOH with more of the flexibility and automation they expect from digital media.
For brands, that combination matters. DOOH can support broad awareness, local market activation, creative flexibility, audience targeting, and real-world visibility in environments that are difficult to skip, block, or scroll past.
The next phase of OOH growth will not be defined by visibility alone. It will be defined by context.
Advertisers are not only asking where an ad will appear. They are asking who will see it, what they are doing in that moment, and why that environment matters.
A consumer waiting at a car wash is in a different mindset than someone walking through a retail corridor. A person sitting in a restaurant is experiencing a different moment than someone passing a storefront, visiting a gym, or entering a beauty and wellness destination.
The value of DOOH is increasingly tied to audience quality, dwell time, location relevance, and how naturally the media fits into the environment. For advertisers, this creates an opportunity to plan around real consumer behavior rather than impressions alone.
Retail media is one of the clearest examples of where the market is heading.
Retail media is no longer limited to e-commerce websites, loyalty programs, or checkout screens. It is expanding into physical environments where consumers shop, dine, move, wait, and make decisions.
For advertisers, that creates access to real audiences in environments tied directly to behavior.
For property owners, retailers, and venue operators, it creates a new way to think about physical space. A location can be more than a storefront, restaurant, salon, gym, car wash, or shopping center. It can also become a media asset.
That shift is especially important as in-store and place-based retail media continue growing. As more advertiser demand moves toward environments closer to consumer decision-making, physical venues have an opportunity to participate in the media economy in a more meaningful way.
The strongest media strategies are no longer built around one channel. They are built around how audiences move across channels, environments, and moments throughout the day.
OOH helps brands connect with consumers outside the digital feed. DOOH adds flexibility, creative rotation, and more dynamic activation. Retail media brings brands closer to environments where people are already shopping, browsing, waiting, and deciding.
Together, these shifts are creating a more connected version of real-world advertising.
For brands and agencies, the opportunity is to use OOH not as a separate channel, but as part of a broader media strategy that connects digital campaigns with physical-world attention.
For local and regional businesses, it creates a way to reach nearby audiences in high-traffic environments with the sophistication of digital media.
For property owners and venue partners, it creates a way to unlock new value from existing real estate.
But the biggest opportunity ahead is not just growth. It is smarter growth.
As DOOH expands, programmatic buying accelerates, and retail media moves deeper into physical environments, advertisers will need networks that make the physical world easier to understand, buy, and measure.
The brands that use real-world environments strategically will be better positioned to capture attention where consumers actually spend their time.
And as OOH, DOOH, and retail media continue converging, the value of physical space as a media channel will only become harder to ignore.