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CreatorsGoogleTechYouTube

YouTube cuts interruptive mid-roll ads starting May 2025

YouTube Studio’s new tool flags interruptive ads as May update nears. Better viewing, mixed creator results.

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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Feb 25, 2025, 11:00 AM EST
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The image features the YouTube logo, which consists of a white play button inside a white rectangle, next to the word "YouTube" in white text. The background is a blue pattern resembling a net with small black dots scattered throughout.
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Imagine you’re deep into a YouTube video—maybe a heated gaming stream or a cooking tutorial where the chef’s about to reveal the secret to the perfect sauce—and bam, an ad for car insurance cuts in mid-sentence. Annoying, right? Well, YouTube’s finally doing something about it. Starting May 12th, the platform is rolling out a change that promises fewer mid-roll ads popping up at the worst possible moments—like when someone’s mid-rant or mid-chop. Instead, they’re shifting those ads to “natural break points,” like pauses or scene transitions. It’s a move that could make your binge-watching a little less jarring, and it’s got some interesting ripples for the creators who keep the platform humming.

According to a YouTube Help page laying out the details, the goal is to cut down on what the company calls “interruptive” ad slots—those awkward interruptions that make you want to chuck your phone across the room. At the same time, YouTube’s slipping “additional, automatic ad slots” into older videos that still rely on manually placed ads. If you’re a creator who’s been meticulously setting ad breaks since the early days, you can opt out of this auto-placement tweak, but the clock’s ticking to decide.

For viewers, this sounds like a win. Fewer ads slicing through the action should mean a smoother experience—less of that “wait, what were they saying?” frustration. But for the YouTubers who depend on ad revenue to pay the bills, it’s a bit of a mixed bag. YouTube’s giving creators a choice: stick with manually picking ad slots, go full-auto with the platform’s algorithm, or mix the two. To help manual-placement diehards, they’re launching a feedback tool in YouTube Studio that flags whether your chosen ad breaks are “interruptive.” Translation: if your ad pops up mid-sentence, YouTube might not serve it as often—or at all—after May.

YouTube mid-roll ads update.
YouTube mid-roll ads update.
YouTube mid-roll ads update.

Here’s where it gets juicy. YouTube ran an experiment last year and found that videos with a hybrid of automatic and manual ad slots raked in five percent more revenue on average than those with just manual ones. Five percent might not sound like much, but for creators grinding out content week after week, that could mean an extra tank of gas or a fancier mic. The catch? If you cling to interruptive slots, YouTube warns your video “may earn less revenue” post-change. Creators can toggle off auto-placed ads in the Earn tab of YouTube Studio, but it’s not crystal clear if that risks some ads just not showing up.

This isn’t the first time YouTube’s tinkered with how ads work. Late last year, creators got a rude awakening when the platform yanked their ability to decide if ads were skippable or where they landed—pre-roll, mid-roll, or post-roll. The November 2023 update from The Verge reported that YouTubers grumbled about losing that control, especially smaller channels worried about alienating viewers with unskippable 15-second pitches. This latest shift feels like a softer nudge, but it’s still YouTube flexing its muscle as the one really running the show.

So, what’s driving this? YouTube says it’s about “balancing monetization with viewing experience,” which is corporate-speak for “we want viewers to stick around and creators to still cash out.” It’s a tightrope walk. Too many ads—or badly timed ones—and viewers bounce. Too few, and creators can’t justify the grind. The platform’s been under pressure to keep both sides happy, especially as competitors like TikTok siphon off attention with their snappy, ad-light feeds. (Though, let’s be real, TikTok’s creeping in more ads lately too—check out Forbes’ take on their longer, less-skippable spots.)

For creators, the stakes are real. Take someone like MKBHD, the tech reviewer with millions of subs. His videos are polished, often 10-20 minutes long—prime real estate for mid-rolls. If he’s been hand-picking ad breaks to keep his flow tight, this change might nudge him toward YouTube’s algorithm to squeeze out that extra five percent. Smaller channels, though? They might feel the pinch more if their manual slots get flagged as “interruptive” and revenue dips.

Viewers might not care about the behind-the-scenes drama, but they’ll notice the shift. Fewer mid-sentence ads could make longer videos—like those 40-minute deep dives into true crime or video essays—more palatable. TechRadar pointed out that YouTube’s been testing viewer patience for years, from double pre-rolls to those sneaky mid-rolls that started creeping into 8-minute-plus videos back in 2020. This tweak feels like a peace offering after years of pushing the ad envelope.

Still, don’t expect an ad-free utopia. YouTube’s bread and butter is advertising—Statista pegged its ad revenue at $31.5 billion in 2023—so they’re not about to dial it back too far. The “natural break points” promise might just mean more ads clustered at chapter breaks or intros, which could still feel like overkill on a 10-minute video with five ad slots. And if creators lean harder into auto-placement, will we start seeing ads in weirder spots, like right before a cliffhanger?

For now, mark your calendars for May 12th. If you’re a viewer, you might get a slightly less interrupted binge. If you’re a creator, it’s decision time: trust YouTube’s algorithm or roll the dice with your own instincts. Either way, the platform’s sending a message—ads aren’t going anywhere, but maybe, just maybe, they’ll bug you a little less.


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