What is the actual percentage of people exclusively listening to vinyl vs digital?


I well remember in the ‘80s when we were amazed and thrilled by CD.
Wow, no more pops and clicks and all the physical benefits.
Seems so many abandoned vinyl.
But now, with so much convenience, available content and high SQ seems even dedicated vinylholics have again abandoned vinyl and embraced digital. However, there is clearly a new resurgence in analog.
But I look at, for example, whitecamaro’s “List of amplifiers...” thread and no one seems interested in analog!
To me, it seems strange when auditioning “$100Kish gear, that vinyl doesn’t enter the picture or conversation.
mglik
Hey chakster I'm 68 and play CD's exclusively but thank god my favorite amp has no remote and I'm not too lazy to get up and adjust the volume. I hope you can give me a pass.
I recently sold all my vinyl gear and albums and have gone completely digital. I could not justify having 2 formats anymore. My vinyl setup was worth about $12,000, yet my digital setup that I had only 1/3 of that amount invested in was for the most part just as satisfying.
The real kicker for me was when I began to stream Tidal. No, it’s not the MQA that made the difference. It was that I could now, in many cases access current better masterings of the music I loved. Many of these sounded superior to the initial digital masterings which produced the CDs I had in my collection for some time. Also, the best sounding vinyl were the few pieces I owned that were quite old and produced from analog masters. The vast majority of the vinyl produced today, comes from a digitized master anyways and sounds pretty darn similar to a digital source. The only vinyl that was truly worth it were some of the special pressings that are analog all the way and really pricey. I got tired of buying vinyl that I didn't want because it sounded the same as digital, or I didn't like the music. And how many of us had to deal with the accidental breakage a stylus of an expensive MC cartridge. No more for me!
Lastly, I like to explore new music. With a streaming service I can access a world of music and listen to what I like. In the days before you could preview music online,, how many times did you buy a CD/Vinyl that you didn’t like or that was poorly recorded and you just wasted your money?
I will admit, vinyl is such an engaging thing for audiophiles. So much to tweek, cartridge alignment, turntable set up, phono stages and loading, record cleaning, stylus cleaning, cueing up and down and so on. For many that process is fun, it was for me. But digital, when it’s done right (which it often is not) can sound just as good IMHO
Haven’t entered the music streaming venue.  
Vinyl, CD’s and recently cassettes have been added to my listening experience.
Vinyl is my evening listening.  The time is dedicated to enjoy music.
During the day CD’s are my main 
source.  Fine sound and the convenience drives these hours.
Recently returned to the cassette  medium.  Purchased a fine player
and pulled my stored cassette collection.  Enjoy the sound as well. 
CD’s - 50 %
Vinyl - 25 %
Cassette  - 25 %
Mike B
According to this article from RIAA (Recording Industry of America Association) https://www.riaa.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Mid-Year-2020-RIAA-Revenue-Statistics.pdf, from the mid-year 2020 statistics, streaming accounts for 85% of sales, 7% physical, 6% digital downloads.

Physical took a 23% hit from the prior year likely due to COVID and
most record stores being closed.

Surprising thing is for the first time since the 80s, vinyl sales
outdid CD sales. The sobering part is, vinyl only accounted for 4% of
total recorded music sales.

Granted, this only answers part of the OP question about who is listening to what format.  But it gives a clue of a general trend no matter what the age of the listener.

Personally, I never gave up vinyl/cassettes from the 80s.  When one listens to a lot of indie music, the release format varies depending on the budget the band has for releasing their music.   Plus, being a 60 something "old fart" means keeping a working turntable and cassette machine alive.

Therefore, my listening breaks down to 50% vinyl, 45% CD and 5% cassette.  I do not partake in streaming.  Not a lot of what I listen to is available on any of the streaming services.
I only use wood for heat and power and I don’t have indoor plumbing at all. Not bad, eh? ;-)

@hilde45

I use 45 tubes for heating (and those Globe RCA made nearly 100 years ago), my First Watt F2J solid state amp is also very hot which is very nice during the cold winter :)

Here is my system. Now please tell me why do I need digital or stupid TV between the speakers? Digital is on my iPhone to discover music and to buy what I like on original vinyl, very simple.

I also can play digital from my iPhone via bluetooth anytime I want to share new discoveries when I visit friends (which is great).

But I want my music on vinyl and digital in whatever quality can’t replace original vinyl (or a habit to buy vintage vinyl every month). I have massive collection of rare records (45s and LPs).

Digital is nothing, everyone can copy many terabytes of music immediately from hard drive, it’s free. If this is what you want then go digital.

Record collecting is something else.