Savannah Guthrie and Robin Roberts

NBC’s Today reclaimed the crown in the key 25-54 demographic for the second consecutive week after briefly surrendering it to GMA. According to Nielsen data for the week of August 4, Today averaged 553,000 viewers in the demo—a 3% jump from the previous week and the only morning show posting growth. Yet while advertisers celebrate, total viewership paints a more complicated picture: 2.379 million for Today, down 2% from last week and plunging nearly a quarter from the same period last year.

Meanwhile, GMA flexes its raw power with 2.547 million total viewers, despite an 8% dip in the demo to 434,000. CBS Mornings lingers in third, with 1.784 million viewers and 327,000 in the demo, holding steady despite minor declines. These numbers reveal more than audience size—they expose influence, reach, and the magnetic pull of morning personalities.

GMA’s stars Robin Roberts, George Stephanopoulos, Michael Strahan, and Ginger Zee bring both charm and star power, while Today fires back with Savannah Guthrie, Craig Melvin, Al Roker, Carson Daly, Jenna Bush Hager, Dylan Dreyer, and Sheinelle Jones, all battling for attention in a cutthroat morning landscape. CBS Mornings, led by Gayle King, Nate Burleson, and Tony Dokoupil, quietly positions itself as the sleeper threat, ready to capitalize on any misstep.

The latest ratings hint at a larger trend: while Today’s demo victory is gold for advertisers chasing younger viewers, GMA’s total audience supremacy reflects broader mainstream reach. Both shows, however, are down from last year, showing that streaming and on-demand platforms are reshaping the morning battle. Every exclusive interview, viral moment, and host quip now carries more weight than ever.

The morning TV war is far from over. NBC’s demo victory, ABC’s total viewer dominance, and CBS’s steady niche show that morning supremacy can shift overnight. As personalities clash and ratings fluctuate, one thing is certain: the fight for America’s attention before sunrise has never been more dramatic, and viewers can’t look away.