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From Phone to Living Room: Meta Tests Instagram on TV

Anderson Liam
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Instagram is taking a deliberate step toward the living room, testing a TV version of its app in the U.S. through Amazon Fire TV devices. NewsTrackerToday sees the move as a clear signal that Meta wants Instagram to evolve from a mobile-first social app into a broader video platform competing more directly with TikTok and YouTube for attention on larger screens.

The new TV experience focuses entirely on Reels, keeping the short-form, vertically oriented videos that dominate Instagram’s current engagement. Rather than redesigning content for a horizontal format, Meta is opting for continuity, betting that familiarity matters more than visual optimization in the early stages. In NewsTrackerToday’s view, this lowers friction for creators while allowing the company to test whether Reels can hold attention in a lean-back environment.

Meta has also set clear boundaries around length and structure. Reels on TV are limited to clips of three minutes or less, reinforcing Instagram’s commitment to short-form viewing even as competitors experiment with longer formats. The approach reflects lessons learned from IGTV, Meta’s earlier attempt at long-form video, which struggled to create sustained user habits. Sophie Leclerc, who covers platform strategy and consumer technology, notes: “This feels like a cautious expansion, not a format gamble – Meta is protecting what already works instead of forcing creators into a new production model.”

Competition is a central driver. TikTok and YouTube have increasingly positioned short videos as something users can watch on televisions as easily as on phones. If Instagram remained confined to mobile, it risked being relegated to a secondary screen. News Tracker Today interprets the TV rollout as an effort to claim a share of primary viewing time, subtly repositioning Instagram from an app you scroll to a channel you watch.

Notably, Meta is downplaying monetization for now. Executives have emphasized user experience over immediate advertising expansion, suggesting the company is prioritizing habit formation before introducing TV-specific ad formats. Ethan Cole, NewsTrackerToday’s chief economic analyst, sees that restraint as intentional. “Connected TV advertising is lucrative, but only once usage is predictable,” he says. “Meta appears focused on proving repeat engagement before turning Reels on TV into a revenue engine.”

The app is also designed for shared environments. Users can link multiple Instagram accounts to a single TV profile, while Meta plans to apply broader content standards suitable for household viewing.We believe this reflects an understanding that success on TV requires stricter content control than on personal devices, even if that tempers some of the platform’s raw spontaneity.

For creators, the shift introduces subtle pressure to think beyond the phone screen. Content that relies on clear visuals, strong audio and simple framing is likely to translate better to televisions, even without format changes. Advertisers, meanwhile, should view the test as a signal rather than a finished product – an early indicator of where Instagram may unlock future premium video inventory.

The broader implication, in NewsTrackerToday’s assessment, is that Meta is probing one of the few remaining growth vectors for Instagram: time spent. If Reels can become a repeat viewing habit in the living room, Instagram’s role in the video ecosystem – and its competitive standing against TikTok and YouTube – could shift materially. The real test will come not from launch metrics, but from whether users return to Reels on TV once the novelty fades.

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