New Delhi: The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) has prolonged the suspension of television rating data for news channels, directing the Broadcast Audience Research Council (BARC) to continue withholding TRPs for an additional four weeks.
The latest directive, issued on March 31, 2026, extends an earlier order from March 6 that had initially paused ratings publication for a month. The ministry has clarified that the suspension will remain in place for four weeks or until further instructions are issued, whichever comes earlier.
The government has attributed the extension to the continuing instability in West Asia, noting that the situation remains sensitive and could influence how news is consumed and presented. Officials indicated that the move is intended to discourage excessive sensationalism and speculative coverage during a period of heightened geopolitical tension.
Television Rating Points (TRPs) are central to India’s broadcast ecosystem, functioning as the primary metric for viewership measurement. They directly impact advertising flows and determine the competitive standing of news channels. With ratings now unavailable, broadcasters are effectively operating without a publicly visible performance benchmark.
The extended blackout places the industry in an unusual position, particularly during a high-intensity global news cycle. Without weekly ratings data, both advertisers and broadcasters may have to rely on alternative indicators such as reach, brand strength, and distribution to assess performance.
While positioned as a temporary intervention under regulatory powers tied to public order, the continuation of the suspension underscores the government’s ongoing concerns around the tone of news coverage. For now, the absence of TRPs reshapes the competitive landscape, pausing the traditional ratings-driven rivalry that typically defines the TV news segment.















