What are the 10 biggest Disney franchises?
Awhile ago, I looked at Warner Bros.’s 10 top franchises by revenue, with the top earner being the “Harry Potter” franchise (via the WB-released movies). Which led me to wonder what the top media franchises were for other media conglomerates.
In that spirit, below is a look at what the 10 top-grossing franchises are for Disney. Information is taken from Wikipedia (though each entry’s sourced), thus some of the listings overlap. Note some of these include revenue earned before Disney bought the franchise in question, but they’re listed here anyway for simplicity. There are also gaps in some of the years for some info (such as merchandise sales), so the actual figures for those franchises might be even higher. Figures also aren’t adjusted for inflation. Still, it gives a rough idea of Disney’s biggest money-makers.
The top 10 Disney franchises
Mickey Mouse & Friends: $52.2 billion
Winnie the Pooh: $48.5 billion
Star Wars: $46.7 billion
Disney Princess: $45.4 billion
Marvel Cinematic Universe: $29.7 billion
Spider-Man: $25.4 billion ($1.5 billion from Sony’s films’ box office)
Cars: $21.5 billion
The Lion King: $15.2 billion
Toy Story: $14.8 billion
The Avengers: $14.3 billion
Observations
Overall, most of Disney’s biggest earners come from companies the Mouse House bought in recent decades, including Pixar, Marvel, and Lucasfilm. However, the biggest earner is its original franchise, “Mickey Mouse & Friends.” That’s Disney’s official branding for media/merchandise related to Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Goofy, and company, from “Steamboat Willie” to “DuckTales” to “Uncle Scrooge” comics. I note nearly all of this figure, $51.66 billion, comes from “retail sales,” i.e. merchandise. “Mickey Mouse & Friends” is also the second highest-earning franchise on Wikipedia’s page, after “Pokemon.”
At #2 is Disney’s version of “Winnie the Pooh.” Despite Pooh finally entering public domain this year, Disney still owns the copyright on their version of the “silly old bear,” and are free to keep pulling in merchandise revenue.
Several of these entries overlap: “Marvel Cinematic Universe” (#5), “Spider-Man” to an extent (#6), and “The Avengers” (#10). Of course, Spider-Man is still Marvel’s flagship character, despite the Avengers’ boom in popularity over the past dozen or so years. It’s also unclear if or how much the original comics factor into any of these figures.
“Cars” is a merchandising boom for Disney/Pixar. The $21.5 billion figure is almost all from merchandise ($19.1 billion), which explains why they kept making “Cars” films (despite mixed reviews).
As for how Disney itself is doing as a conglomerate, while they clearly have problems, their current market cap is (as of this writing) $188 billion, almost 10 times that of longtime rival Warner Bros. (at $19.7 billion). The Mouse House isn’t going anywhere.