At A Glance
The 2026 election cycle is more fragmented and complex than in previous years, with greater advertising spend. Political advertisers are managing multiple races, timelines, and voter priorities at the same time. Reaching the right voters takes a more informed approach. Experian Audiences help advertisers understand voter motivations, plan around election timing, and connect with people based on how they consume media.In this article…
Why audience strategy matters more in the 2026 election cycle
Audience strategy matters more in the 2026 election cycle as it’s more crowded and competitive than previous midterms. Every House seat is on the ballot, one-third of the Senate is up for election, and more than 6,000 state legislative seats are being contested across 46 states. With campaigns, party committees, PACs, Super PACs, and issue-based organizations all competing for voter attention, demand for advertising inventory is rising across channels.
That demand is driving spending higher. Political ad spend is projected to reach $10.8 billion, with billions already committed early in the cycle. As more advertisers enter the market, the cost of reaching voters continues to increase. But, organizations are competing to shape voter perceptions around issues such as healthcare, affordability, immigration, education, housing, and climate.
At the same time, voter behavior isn’t consistent. What drives one voter to engage may not matter to another, with priorities ranging from affordability and healthcare to housing, education, and national policy. Voting now stretches across weeks rather than a single day, and media consumption is spread across TV, social, digital, and streaming, making attention and trust harder to capture.
Together, these shifts have changed how campaigns approach voter outreach. It’s no longer enough to focus on reach alone. Campaigns need to understand what matters to different voters, tailor messages to those priorities, and connect with them in the moments and environments where they are most likely to engage.
That requires a more intentional approach to audience strategy, grounded in several factors:
- What voters care about
- When they’re most likely to act
- Where they’re most likely to engage
Three audience signals that will shape political campaigns in 2026
Political campaigns in 2026 will be shaped by three signals:
- Voter issue and motivation
- Election calendar timing
- Media behavior and trust signals
You can find the full taxonomy paths in the appendix.
1. Rising spend and issue-driven voting are raising the cost of irrelevance
Rising political ad spend and issue-driven voting are raising the cost of irrelevance for campaigns. As political ad spending rises, campaigns face a growing challenge: voters are increasingly motivated by different issues and priorities. Affordability, healthcare, housing, education, climate, and public safety can all influence how people respond to political messaging. What resonates with one voter may have little impact on another.
In this environment, the cost of irrelevance is growing. Broad messaging can quickly lose efficiency, particularly as campaigns compete for attention across crowded media channels. Messages that fail to connect with a voter’s priorities are more likely to waste budget than influence outcomes.
Relevance now depends on understanding both who voters are and what matters most to them. Campaigns need the flexibility to reach audiences based on affiliations, interests, and issue priorities as those motivations shift throughout the election cycle.
Campaigns that align messaging with voter priorities are better positioned to stay relevant, make more efficient use of media spend, have a greater impact and maintain engagement throughout the election cycle.
Experian Audiences you can activate based on rising spend and issue-driven voting
Political affiliation and contributors
- Democratic Voting Adults
- High Spend Political Organization Consumers
- Independent or Other Registered Adults
- Political Charity Contributors
- Republican Voting Adults
Issues
Affordability
- Buy Now Pay Later In Market Users
- Debt Consolidation Candidates
Health
- Occupation: Healthcare/Social Services
- Medical Insurance Policy Holders
- Medicare Policy Holders
Education
- Education
- Moms, Parents, Families > Moms with School Age Children Age 7-12
Climate
- Environmentally Green Consumers
- E-Vehicle Charging Station Visitors
- Weather and Climate Followers
How to use these audiences
Activate audiences like Democratic and Republican Voting Adults alongside Political Charity Contributors to reach individuals already engaged in voting and donation behavior, and segments such as Debt Consolidation Candidates and Environmentally Green Consumers to connect messaging to financial pressures and climate priorities that influence how people engage and take action.
2. The election calendar creates multiple audience moments, not one campaign window
The election calendar creates multiple audience moments as voting no longer happens within a single, defined window. Early voting periods can extend for weeks, and many voters cast ballots before Election Day. As a result, campaigns must engage voters across a longer and more dynamic timeline.
Campaign goals change throughout that timeline. Early in the cycle, campaigns focus on candidate introductions and awareness-building. As elections approach, priorities shift toward voter education, issue communication, persuasion, and turnout. Different phases require different audiences and different messaging strategies.
The voters who matter during a low-turnout primary are not always the same voters who matter during early voting or the final push before Election Day. Campaigns may need to reach highly engaged voters, issue-focused audiences, swing voters, or turnout targets at different points in the cycle.
Timing changes the value of every audience. Not every voter needs the same message at the same moment. Campaigns that adapt audience strategy to match changing objectives are better positioned to maintain relevance, improve efficiency, and engage voters throughout the election cycle.
Experian Audiences you can activate based on the election calendar creating multiple audience moments
Candidate introductions
- Mass Media Political News Viewers
- National News Followers
- Political Media News Viewers
Voter engagement
- Committed Democratic Tendencies
- Committed Republican Tendencies
- Conservative Political News Viewers
- Liberal Political News Viewers
Ballot measure education
- Avid Political News Readers
- Informed Consumer
- Local News Readers
- Online Research-Dependent Consumers
Late targeting
- Affiliation Switching Counties
- Battleground Voting Counties
- House Battleground Districts
- Moderate Democratic Tendencies
- Moderate Republican Tendencies
How to use these audiences
Activate audiences like Political Media News Viewers and National News Followers to build early awareness, Committed Democratic and Republican Tendencies to reach highly engaged primary voters, Informed Consumers to support ballot education, and Moderate Democratic and Republican Tendencies to connect with voters still open to persuasion, aligning messaging to how engagement and decision-making shift throughout the election cycle.
3. Media behavior and trust signals
Media behavior and trust signals influence how voters consume information and respond to political messaging. Voters are spread across a wide range of media channels. Media consumption habits vary significantly across voter groups. Younger voters are more likely to engage with social media, podcasts, and influencer-driven content, while older voters are more likely to rely on traditional news sources such as television and print. Around 38% of U.S. adults get news on Facebook, 35% on YouTube, and about one in five rely on platforms like Instagram or TikTok, with more than half listening to podcasts in the past year. At the same time, only 28% of U.S. adults say they trust mass media, which means where a message appears can shape how it is received.
This makes channel selection part of audience strategy. Campaigns need to understand not just who they are trying to reach, but where those audiences engage and which environments support the message. Media behavior itself can be a valuable audience signal, helping campaigns identify not only who to reach, but how those voters prefer to consume information.
Campaign constraints add another layer. Geographic targeting, platform policies, inventory availability, and election timing all reduce the size of the reachable audience. Each layer narrows reach, which means audience design has to account for those realities from the start.
Effective strategies combine audience relevance with media behavior and scale. Campaigns can start with a core audience and refine it using channel preferences or demographic signals, then activate it across environments that match how those voters consume information. The goal is to maintain consistency while adapting to different channels, without losing reach as constraints are applied.
In practice, this means building audiences that are not only relevant but large enough to remain effective under real campaign conditions. Successful strategies start with the audience and then layer in channel preferences, media habits, and engagement signals to activate those audiences in the environments where they are most likely to be receptive.
Experian Audiences you can activate based on media behavior and trust signals
Channel preference and trust
- Active Facebook Users
- Active Instagram Users
- CNN News Viewers
- Digital Display
- Email Engagement
- Extreme TV Ad Avoider Households
- Fox News Viewers
- TikTok Users
- TV Ad Acceptor Households
- YouTube OTT Streaming Watcher Households
How to use these audiences
Activate audiences like TV Ad Acceptor Households and Extreme TV Ad Avoider Households to align messaging with how receptive viewers are to advertising, alongside Active Facebook Users and TikTok Users to reach socially engaged audiences, and Adults 18–24 and Adults 65+ to reflect generational differences in media consumption, helping campaigns connect messaging to where and how people prefer to engage with information.
Looking to simplify your media activation?
Finding publishers and sites that accept political ads and are compliant can be a difficult task. Experian has built pre-packaged deals that are hosted directly on Adobe, Adform, Digilant, Illumin, and Optimum Media that combine our high-value political audiences with political-compliant inventory.
These deals include:
- Political-compliant inventory + center
- Political-compliant inventory + high CTR
- Political-compliant inventory + high VCR
- Political-compliant inventory + high viewability
- Political-compliant inventory + left-leaning
- Political-compliant inventory + right-leaning
- Political-compliant inventory + undecided
What sets Experian Audiences apart?
Our syndicated audiences give you an advantage across channels, offering both scale and accuracy:
- Experian’s 3,500+ syndicated audiences are available at over 200 leading activation platforms, including programmatic, social, TV destinations.
- Reach consumers based on who they are, where they live, and their household makeup.
We can also help you build your own custom private marketplace through Curated Deals. Our team of media and audience experts will work with you to understand your campaign goals, audience needs, and any compliance restrictions to build, activate, and optimize your private marketplace.
Explore some of our Partner Audiences that complement Experian Audiences across key political use cases, with flexible activation through Experian’s data marketplace or leading activation platforms.
L2
- Likely Moderates based on the L2 HaystaqDNA models or flagged as Non-Partisan by L2
- Likely to vote early (by mail or in person)
- Voted in 4 of the last 4 even year general elections (2024, 2022, 2020, 2018)
- Voters not registered with a party or likely independent
- Voters registered since November 8, 2023
Tunnl
- All Registered Voters Congressional District CA-13
- All Registered Voters Congressional District MI-13
- All Registered Voters Congressional District PA-13
- Social Media Activists
- Swing Voters
Resonate
- Oppose Renewable Energy
- Oppose Tax Cuts
- Support Online Privacy Laws
- Support Renewable Energy
- Support Tax Cuts
Need a custom audience? Reach out to our audience team, and we can help you build and activate an Experian audience on the platform of your choice.
Want to activate an Experian Audience on Meta, Pinterest, Snap, TikTok, or on a platform not listed above? Contact us today.
For a full list, download our syndicated audiences guide.
Reach the right audiences for your industry
Reach voters based on real-world political engagement with Experian Audiences
In a cycle defined by fragmented media, extended voting windows, and competing voter priorities, audience strategy has become just as important as message strategy. The most effective campaigns will be those that understand what motivates voters and adapt as priorities and campaign objectives shift throughout the election cycle.
Experian Audiences help political advertisers identify and activate relevant voter segments across channels, making it easier to align messaging with voter interests, issue priorities, and campaign goals at every stage of the election cycle.
Connect with our audience experts
FAQs
Experian Audiences are pre-built, privacy-compliant consumer segments that help marketers target based on verified demographic, financial, and behavioral data.
They’re designed for flexibility across channels and can be activated on 200+ platforms, including major social, CTV, and programmatic partners.
Marketers can choose from 3,500+ syndicated audiences that capture signals such as income, spending behavior, household structure, financial attitudes, and ability to pay. These same audiences are also available through partnerships on platforms like DirecTV, Dish, Magnite, OpenAP, and The Trade Desk.
For a deeper look at our audience catalog, explore our syndicated audience guide.
You can activate Experian Audiences across 200+ digital and connected TV (CTV) platforms, including Basis, Meta, The Trade Desk, Yahoo, and Experian’s private marketplaces (PMPs) through our Curation products.
Yes, you can combine your own first-party data with Experian’s 3,500+ syndicated audiences and additional segments from multiple partner data providers, as a custom audience within a Curated Deal, or self-service via Audience Engine.
Appendix
Political affiliation and contributors
- Politics > Political Affiliation > Democratic Voting Adults
- Purchase Predictors > Shoppers All Channels > High Spend Political Organization Consumers
- Politics > Political Affiliation > Independent or Other Registered Adults
- Lifestyle and Interests (Affinity) > Charitable Causes > Political Charity Contributors
- Politics > Political Affiliation > Republican Voting Adults
Issues
Affordability
- Financial > In Market > Buy Now Pay Later In Market Users
- Financial > Debt Management & Consolidation > Debt Consolidation Candidates
Health
- Consumer Behaviors > Occupation: Healthcare/Social Services
- Lifestyle and Interests (Affinity) > Financial Behavior > Medical Insurance Policy Holders
- Lifestyle and Interests (Affinity) > Financial Behavior > Medicare Policy Holders
Education
- Lifestyle and Interests (Affinity) > Education
- Lifestyle and Interests (Affinity) > Moms, Parents, Families > Moms with School Age Children Age 7-12
Climate
- GreenAware > Behavioral Greens > Environmentally Green Consumers
- Mobile Location Models > Visits > E-Vehicle Charging Station Visitors
- Lifestyle and Interests (Affinity) > Science > Weather and Climate Followers
Candidate introductions
- Politics > Lifestyle and Interests > Mass Media Political News Viewers
- Lifestyle and Interests (Affinity) > News > National News Followers
- Politics > Lifestyle and Interests > Political Media News Viewers
Voter engagement
- Politics > PoliticalPersonas > Committed Democratic Tendencies
- Politics > PoliticalPersonas > Committed Republican Tendencies
- Politics > Lifestyle and Interests > Conservative Political News Viewers
- Politics > Lifestyle and Interests > Liberal Political News Viewers
Ballot measure education
- Publisher Derived > Affinity > Avid Political News Readers
- Psychographic/Attitudes > Shopping Behavior > Informed Consumer
- Lifestyle and Interests (Affinity) > Local News (FLA / Fair Lending Friendly) > Local News Readers
- Lifestyle and Interests (Affinity) > Technology > Online Research-Dependent Consumers
Late targeting
- Politics > PoliticalPersonas > Affiliation Switching Counties
- Politics > PoliticalPersonas > Battleground Voting Counties
- Politics > PoliticalPersonas > House Battleground Districts
- Politics > PoliticalPersonas > Moderate Democratic Tendencies
- Politics > PoliticalPersonas > Moderate Republican Tendencies
Channel preference and trust
- Social Media > Facebook > Active Facebook Users
- Social Media > Instagram > Active Instagram Users
- Lifestyle and Interests (Affinity) > TV Segments (US) Network > CNN News Viewers
- TrueTouch: Communication Preferences > Engagement Channel Preference > Digital Display
- TrueTouch: Communication Preferences > Engagement Channel Preference > Email Engagement
- Television (TV) > Ad Avoiders/Ad Acceptors > Extreme TV Ad Avoider Households
- Lifestyle and Interests (Affinity) > TV Segments (US) Network > Fox News Viewers
- Lifestyle and Interests (Affinity) > Personas (US) Social Media > TikTok Users
- Television (TV) > Ad Avoiders/Ad Acceptors > TV Ad Acceptor Households
- Lifestyle and Interests (Affinity) > Over The Top And Gaming > YouTube OTT Streaming Watcher Households
L2
- Political > Political Activism & Strife > Likely Moderates based on the L2 HaystaqDNA models or flagged as Non-Partisan by L2
- Political > Voting Behavior > Likely to vote early (by mail or in person)
- Political > Voting History > Voted in 4 of the last 4 even year general elections (2024, 2022, 2020, 2018)
- Political > Voting History > Voters not registered with a party or likely independent
- Political > Voting History > Voters registered since November 8, 2023
Tunnl
- Political > Affiliation & Ideology > Voters > Registered > Tunnl All Registered Voters Congressional District CA-13
- Political > Affiliation & Ideology > Voters > Registered > Tunnl All Registered Voters Congressional District MI-13
- Political > Affiliation & Ideology > Voters > Registered > Tunnl All Registered Voters Congressional District PA-13
- Political > Activism & Civic Engagement > Social Media Activist > No Sentiment > Social Media Activists
- Political > Voting Behavior > Voters > Swing > Tunnl Swing Voters
Resonate
- Politics & Advocacy > Hot Button Issues > Oppose Renewable Energy
- Politics & Advocacy > Hot Button Issues > Oppose Tax Cuts
- Politics & Advocacy > Hot Button Issues > Support Online Privacy Laws
- Politics & Advocacy > Hot Button Issues > Support Renewable Energy
- Politics & Advocacy > Hot Button Issues > Support Tax Cuts
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Learn how brands can close the activation gap by carrying audience intelligence from identity to execution and outcomes across channels.
In our Ask the Expert series, we interview leaders from our partner organizations who are helping lead their brands to new heights in AdTech. Today’s interview is with Samantha Zhang, Senior Data Scientist, and Jim Meyer, General Manager of the DASH TV Universe Study at the Advertising Research Foundation (ARF). DASH is an annual tracking study conducted by the ARF to define and better understand TV audience behavior and household dynamics. What does DASH measure, and how does it help the industry understand TV consumption today? By capturing hundreds of individual- and household-level data points from each respondent in a rigorous and nationally projectable sample, DASH creates a comprehensive picture of U.S. consumer TV “infrastructure” – how America watches. Core elements in DASHElements that create context in DASHTV setsLocation | brand | smartness | service modes | sources DemographicsConnected devices Game consoles |video players | streaming devicesYesterday viewing Daypart | TV/device genre | Out-of-home viewingMobile devicesOwners | sharing usersShoppingOnline and in-store | Exposure to major RMNsInternet serviceModes | ISPs | connectivity by device Streaming audio Streaming TVSVOD/AVOD tiers and sharing | FAST Email accounts and apps Live TV Modes of access | including casting from devices Social media For example, DASH gathers: Data on every TV set, including brand, room location, age, “smartness,” and connection devices and modes Household connectivity and video service data, even in homes with no TV set Internet Service Providers (ISP) and TV service usage, including Multichannel Video Programming Distributors (MVPDs), virtual vMVPDs, streamers (ad-supported and premium), and Free Ad-Supported Television (FAST) channels Person-level ownership and usage of video-capable mobile devices, including smartphones, tablets, and laptops Measures of viewing and co-viewing across dayparts, devices, and services Additional modules covering shopping and retail media networks, streaming audio, social media, email, and apps Broad coverage and granularity make DASH a uniquely robust source of truth for practitioners across the industry, including measurement experts and ad programming strategists. DASH also reports regularly (and publicly) on key industry dynamics. DASH identified a growing segment of device-only viewers – now nearly 9 million households that watch TV, but do not own a TV set – and highlighted the implications of that trend for traditional ratings systems based only on households with TV sets. Households (HHs – million)2025 HHs (M) U.S. penetrationChange vs. 2024 (M)Total US134.8100%+2.7Connected TV (CTV)114.685%+2.1TV (Set)124.292.2%+1.1Device-only8.86.6%+1.6TV-Accessible133.198.7%+2.7 DASH called out the rise in app-based pay TV and proposed a new connection framework that better represents the modern TV world, in which linear and streaming overlap. DASH also defines the universes of households reachable with advertising. This graphic, for example, shows how all ad-supported linear and streaming properties in aggregate define the true scale of TV advertising. While 35 million households (and growing) are reachable only with streaming ads and 13 million (and falling) only with linear ads, most households are reachable with both, underscoring the importance of understanding the “overlap.” Who uses DASH data, and what decisions does it help inform? There are three primary users of DASH, each with its own use cases: Measurement providers, including Nielsen, use DASH to calibrate viewership data, turn household data into persons data (and vice versa) and estimate potential reached audiences–what the providers call media-related universe estimate (MRUEs)–for the calculation of ratings. Not surprisingly, measurement companies were the first to see the value that an independent TV universe study could provide. Media companies, including major broadcasters and streamers, use DASH to add context and color to their ad sales presentations – and to track the measurement providers, whose ratings play a major role in valuing ad inventory. AdTech companies, including Experian, use DASH to create high-value audience segments for activation. The recent accreditation of DASH by the Media Rating Council (MRC) and adoption by Nielsen as an input to its TV ratings have generated interest from a broad range of companies. We are actively pursuing new licensees and partners to make DASH more useful within, and even outside, the TV ecosystem. What does MRC accreditation signify, and why is it meaningful for DASH? MRC accreditation means DASH passed a rigorous audit conducted by Ernst & Young over many months, which validated our methodology, controls, and data quality. MRC accreditation establishes that DASH is an industry-standard dataset. While the service provider normally announces its own accreditation, the MRC took the unusual step of issuing its own release on DASH, announcing the accreditation of DASH for TV universe estimation and endorsing the study for broader, cross-media use. How does Experian use DASH data to build audiences? The segments combine specific TV usage habits and behaviors from DASH with Experian data on demographics, spending, and other contextual inputs to create a fuller view of consumer viewing behavior. They are designed to be valuable to advertisers in many categories and planning contexts – and to be customizable to fit advertisers’ media targets. The segments can be used to: Apply or suppress audiences to improve target coverage across a campaign Better align media and creative Reach elusive but high-value viewers, such as Ad Avoiders Drive valuable consumer behavior Achieve specific advertising objectives What are some practical use cases for DASH-based audiences? Here are some practical use cases for four different kinds of DASH segments in five different advertiser categories. Travel Co-WatchersA couples-only resort uses TV Co-Watching Households without Children to strengthen target reach and ad memory recallA big theme park destination uses TV Co-Watching Households with Children to reach families in moments of togetherness Home Entertainment TV Owners and Brand LoyalistsA premium TV manufacturer uses the overlap of Multi Brand TV Owners and Single Brand TV Loyalist Households to market its newest TV model to its most loyal consumers. Fast Food Screen Size ViewersA fast food chain with a high-impact new brand campaign uses Large Screen TV Viewers to better align the media and creativeThat same fast food chain uses Small-Screen TV Viewers to drive store traffic by increasing exposure of its retail campaign among on-the-go viewers Financial Services Cord Cutters A personal cost management app and a cash-back credit card target Streaming-First Cord Cutter Households to reach young, tech-savvy, cost-conscious consumers Thanks for the interview. Where can readers learn more about DASH? We started work on DASH seven years ago, and it’s been fun to watch it “grow up.” Our partnership with Experian is a big step toward putting DASH to work for advertisers and agencies. To learn more, visit our site at https://theARF.org/DASH or contact us at DASH@theARF.org. Contact us About our experts Samantha Zhang, Senior Data Scientist at ARF Samantha Zhang is a Senior Data Scientist at the Advertising Research Foundation working on the DASH TV Universe Study, with additional research spanning areas including attention measurement, digital privacy, and artificial intelligence. Jim Meyer, General Manager, DASH, at ARF Jim Meyer is general manager and co-founder of the ARF DASH TV Universe Study and managing partner of Golden Square, LLC, which advises media and research technology companies on growth strategy and development. Latest posts
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