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YouTube adds AI-powered skip tool to smart TVs for Premium subscribers

After a long wait, YouTube’s AI-based video skipping tool is finally available on smart TVs for Premium subscribers across select devices.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jul 31, 2025, 5:31 AM EDT
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It’s no secret that more and more of us are leaning back and enjoying YouTube on the big screen. In the United States, television has overtaken mobile devices as the primary way to watch YouTube, with nearly half of all viewing now happening in the living room. Yet until this week, one of YouTube Premium’s slickest tricks—Jump Ahead—was conspicuously absent from TV apps. No longer.

Jump Ahead launched in May of last year for web and mobile Premium subscribers, powered by a simple but clever bit of AI. By analyzing which parts of a video draw the most rewatches—and, crucially, which sections viewers habitually skip—YouTube surfaces “skip points” that are likely to get you to the action faster. Whether it’s blasting past a 30-second ad read in a vlog or cutting straight to a jaw-dropping moment in a documentary, Jump Ahead has been a godsend for binge-watchers and time-starved surf-and-skim audiences alike.

Recently, Android Authority senior contributor Mishaal Rahman spotted Jump Ahead live on his NVIDIA Shield TV. Double-tapping the fast-forward button on web or mobile had been the usual trigger; on TV, YouTube’s support page explains, you press the right arrow on your remote once to highlight the next most-watched segment (marked by a dot on the progress bar) and a second time to jump. Rahman reports seeing the onscreen message “Jumping over commonly skipped section” during tests—a neat little confirmation that the AI is doing its work under the hood.

Android Police also caught wind of the change on a Google TV Streamer, while a handful of Reddit users say they’ve seen the feature pop up on Samsung and LG sets. All the evidence suggests a gradual, staggered rollout, with YouTube quietly flipping the switch for Premium subscribers on “Living Room” devices long before a formal announcement.

How it works

On your PC or phone, Jump Ahead is as simple as a double-tap to skip to the next AI-selected sweet spot. On TV, the flow is a touch more deliberate:

  1. While watching, press the right arrow. A small dot appears on the progress bar.
  2. Press right arrow again to leap to the dot’s location.
  3. Press “Enter” or “OK” to confirm and continue watching.

This contrasts with the default ten-second skip most TV remotes offer, and it cleverly blends into the existing fast-forward paradigm without forcing users to learn new gestures.

YouTube’s algorithms already learn a lot about what we watch and skip; using that data to craft better navigation tools is a logical step. For viewers, it means less fiddling with the remote and fewer unwanted pauses in the flow of content. For creators, Jump Ahead offers a subtle incentive to structure videos with clear highlight moments—knowing those moments may become the “jumps” that lead viewers straight to their best material.

There’s also a nod to the age-old battle against overly long ad reads. Sponsor segments often field the most predictable skips, so the AI tends to land you just past them. In an era when ad blockers and browser extensions vie for attention, YouTube is doubling down on AI as a way to sweeten the subscription pot for Premium users—especially those on TVs, where traditional ad-skipping hacks aren’t available.

Will Jump Ahead remain a Premium-only perk? Might YouTube extend it to ad-supported tiers to shore up viewer satisfaction? Could the AI get even smarter, highlighting not just high-skip but high-replay moments—like complex explanations or hidden Easter eggs? For now, YouTube seems content to test the feature’s waters on its most lucrative tier before committing to a broader launch.

For TV viewers tired of wrestling with remotes and mashing fast-forward, this is—and should be—a welcome update. And if the AI proves reliable, it could redefine how we navigate long-form video, making every viewing session more streamlined and more fun. After all, the best bits are the ones you’ll find first—literally.


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