March 2026 showed minor downturns in viewership for Rumble, with metrics pulling back from February's highs amid a news cycle that, while busy, didn't produce the kind of singular event capable of driving outsized platform-wide spikes. That said, the fundamentals of Rumble's creator ecosystem continued to strengthen, with Active Channels growing by 5.6% to 5,546 — one of the clearest signals that the platform's base of content producers is expanding even as audience numbers settle.
How many viewers watched Rumble streams in March 2026?

The broader platform metrics reflected a quieter month. Throughout March 2026, Rumble’s monthly viewership declined to 27M Hours Watched and it recorded 192.8K Peak Viewers — a steep drop from February, although last month’s PV was an outlier result fuelled by the coverage of the alternative American Halftime Show.
In terms of the creators which make up Rumble, Peak Channels held flat at 241, while Average Channels dipped only marginally. Not all indicators pointed downward, however. Despite this minor decrease in the average amount of channels live at any time, more total Active Channels were recorded for Rumble, marking an increase to over 5,500 individual broadcasters.
Who were Rumble's most-watched channels in March 2026?
Rumble's identity as a home for political and news-oriented content was on full display in the watch time rankings. Many of these creators are consistently on top of the platfform, including The Alex Jones Show, which is arguably Rumble’s most consistent long-form draw, and one of the few broadcasters to earn over 1M Hours Watched in March.
Jones remained a prolific broadcaster throughout the month, covering a range of geopolitical and domestic political topics — with the ongoing U.S. military operations in Iran, internal tensions within the conservative movement, and Trump administration developments all featuring prominently in his content throughout March.

Hot on his heels were Nicholas J. Fuentes and The Dan Bongino Show. Bongino's presence near the top of both the HW and PV charts is particularly notable given the context of his return: after serving as President Trump's Deputy FBI Director and subsequently stepping down, Bongino relaunched his daily show on Rumble in February 2026. Steven Crowder — whose Louder with Crowder show has been a Rumble exclusive since 2023 — and NEWSMAX rounded out the top five by watch time.
The dominance of talk, commentary, and news formats across this list underlines how distinctly Rumble's content landscape differs from platforms like Twitch or YouTube Gaming, where more casual, less produced entertainment and content typically anchor the top of the charts.

The Peak Viewers rankings told a broadly similar story, though with some notable reshuffling. The Dan Bongino Show climbed to the top spot by peak concurrent audience, displacing the channels that led on total watch time. New entries in the peak viewership table include Redacted News, Graham Allen, BonginoReport, TheSaltyCracker, Phil Godlewski 2.0, and Kim Iversen, the latter of whom was the only female streamer to rank top overall. This list reflects a broad ecosystem of independent political commentary and alternative news voices that have found a consistent home on Rumble.
Who were Rumble’s top female streamers in March 2026?

Rumble's female creator space is heavily oriented around political commentary, faith-based programming, and independent journalism. Wendy Bell Radio led the rankings among female channels on Rumble, followed by Julie Green Ministries and Candace Owens. Kim Iversen, who also appeared in the overall Peak Viewers top ten, took fourth place, reinforcing her status as one of Rumble's most cutting female voices.
While Rumble’s positioning within the livestreaming industry is not necessarily expanding, the platform continues to develop an audience of United States-based viewers. The platform’s viewership can wave or wane with the country’s political news, and as discourse around the US builds up, political content will flourish on Rumble.