The world’s biggest video platform wants you to pay up — and it’s raising the stakes every year. Here’s everything you need to know about YouTube Premium, from where it started to what it actually gets you today.
Let’s be honest. The first time you got hit with a 30-second unskippable ad before a 45-second video, you probably thought: there has to be a better way. That better way, according to Google, is YouTube Premium — the subscription tier the company has been quietly pushing on its billions of users for nearly a decade now.
But YouTube Premium has had a complicated life. It’s been rebranded, repriced, expanded, and critiqued — and just this week, in April 2026, Google hit subscribers with another price hike. So what exactly are you paying for? Is it worth it? And where did this whole thing come from in the first place? Let’s dig in.
From YouTube Red to Premium: a brief history
YouTube Premium didn’t start with that name. Go back to October 2015, and you’ll find its predecessor: YouTube Red. It cost $9.99 a month and offered ad-free viewing, offline downloads, and background play. It also gave subscribers access to original programming — exclusive YouTube content, back when Google was still convinced it could compete with Netflix in the scripted content game.
That original push never really caught fire. The original content side quietly faded, and in May 2018, YouTube Red was rebranded as YouTube Premium with a new price of $11.99/month. Along with the rebrand came YouTube Music Premium — a separate streaming music product bundled in — and global expansion to Canada and most of Europe.
Since then, the price has only gone one direction: up. A 2023 hike brought it to $13.99. Then, just days ago, on April 10, 2026, YouTube emailed subscribers again:
To continue delivering great service and features, we’re increasing your price to $15.99/month.
That’s a $2 increase for the individual monthly plan. The family plan jumped from $4 to $26.99/month. The company’s public reasoning? That the update “will allow us to continue to improve Premium and support the creators and artists you watch on YouTube.” Take that as you will.
What do you actually get?
So what does $15.99 a month buy you in 2026? Here’s the honest breakdown:
1. No ads (mostly)
The headline feature. Pay up and you don’t sit through pre-roll ads, mid-roll interruptions, or banner overlays. This is the core value proposition that essentially everything else is stacked on top of. Given that YouTube earned more than $40 billion in ad revenue in 2025 — and recently expanded unskippable 30-second ads on the TV app — the ad-free experience is increasingly valuable for heavy users.
2. Background play
This one’s underrated. With a free YouTube account, the moment you switch to another app or lock your screen, your video stops. With Premium, it keeps going. Whether that’s a podcast, a workout video, or a long video essay you’re half-listening to while making dinner — it changes how you use the app entirely.
3. Offline Downloads
Download videos over Wi-Fi and watch them later without burning through data. It’s the feature road-trippers and frequent flyers have been quietly depending on for years.
4. YouTube Music Premium
Your subscription also covers YouTube Music — Google’s Spotify competitor. You get access to over 300 million tracks (yes, the catalog is genuinely enormous, partly because it includes a lot of unofficial uploads and live recordings), ad-free and with background play. It’s a legitimately competitive music streaming product, and for users already embedded in the Google ecosystem, it removes the need for a separate Spotify or Apple Music subscription.
5. Recent feature additions
Recent years have brought some genuinely useful extras: a jump-ahead tool that skips to the most-watched moments of a video, enhanced 1080p bitrate for sharper streams, picture-in-picture for YouTube Shorts, and faster playback speeds. These aren’t headline grabbers, but if you’re watching hours of YouTube a week, they add up.
The tier system: which plan makes sense?
YouTube now offers a tiered system, which is a relatively recent addition:
| Plan | Monthly Price | Who It’s For |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | $15.99/month (or $159.99/year — saves 15%) | Solo users |
| Family | $26.99/month | Up to 5 household members (ages 13+) |
| Student | $8.99/month | Verified students only; annual re-verification |
| Premium Lite | $8.99/month | Ad-free on most videos, no Music |
That student plan at $8.99 is arguably the best deal in the lineup — if you qualify. You do need to verify enrollment every year, but for college students who live on YouTube, it’s a no-brainer.
The annual individual plan at $159.99 is also worth highlighting. It’s the equivalent of $13.33/month — meaningfully cheaper than the monthly rate, and it doesn’t auto-renew, which gives you more control.
What is Premium Lite?
This is the newest addition to the lineup and it’s worth understanding. YouTube Premium Lite launched in the US in March 2025 at $7.99/month (now bumped to $8.99 after the April 2026 hike). It gives you ad-free viewing on most YouTube and YouTube Kids videos, offline downloads, and background play — but no YouTube Music Premium, and not every single video is guaranteed to be ad-free.
It was introduced partly as a response to the growing backlash over rising Premium costs. The idea is simple: if you don’t care about music streaming, you can pay a bit less and still get the core ad-removal experience. Whether the value is there depends entirely on how much you use YouTube Music.
Are ads actually getting that bad?
Here’s where it gets spicy. YouTube’s whole pitch for Premium gets stronger the worse the free tier becomes. And lately, the free tier has been getting noticeably worse.
Not only did YouTube expand unskippable 30-second ads on TV apps this year, but in early April 2026, thousands of users started reporting something even more alarming: 90-second unskippable ads. Social media lit up. Screenshots circulated. People were furious.
YouTube’s official response on X was swift — and quickly embarrassing. The company claimed it “does not have a 90-second non-skippable ad format” and was not testing one. That post was almost immediately hit with a community note from other users confirming the opposite.
The company later walked it back with a more nuanced explanation: the 90-second experiences were actually a bug — a 30-second unskippable ad running directly into several shorter skippable ads, with the interface showing one big combined countdown timer. YouTube said it’s rolling out a fix. Whether users believe that or not is a separate question.
What this episode makes clear, though, is that the implicit deal between YouTube and free users is being renegotiated. The platform will take your eyeballs one way or another. You can pay with money or you can pay with attention — and the attention toll is rising.
So is YouTube Premium actually worth it?
This is the question everyone asks, and the honest answer is: it depends almost entirely on how much YouTube you watch.
For casual viewers — a few videos a week, mostly on desktop, where ad-blockers still largely work — it’s hard to justify $15.99 a month. At that price, you’re in the same ballpark as Netflix, Disney+, or a Spotify subscription.
But for heavy users? The calculus changes fast. Background play alone transforms the mobile experience. If you’re also a music listener and might otherwise pay for Spotify ($11.99/month), the bundled YouTube Music subscription starts to look like genuine added value. The student and annual plans bring the cost down to a point where the math gets easier.
The family plan is worth mentioning separately: at $26.99 for up to six people, that’s under $4.50 per person per month. For a household of YouTube addicts, that’s genuinely compelling.
The bigger picture
YouTube Premium’s story is, in some ways, the story of the internet’s maturation. The era of free, ad-light web content is over. Every major platform — Netflix, Amazon, Spotify, YouTube — is extracting more money from subscribers and leaning harder on ads for those who won’t pay.
YouTube’s position is unique, though. It isn’t competing just with other streaming services. It’s also competing with ad-blockers, third-party YouTube clients, and the free tier of its own platform. That tension — between a product that’s free by default and a premium tier asking for real money — shapes every decision the company makes about how many ads are too many and how good Premium needs to be.
What’s clear heading into mid-2026 is that Google is betting you’ll eventually reach your breaking point with ads. The 90-second unskippable bug situation, whether intentional or not, only reinforces that message. The platform is slowly making the free experience more uncomfortable — and Premium more appealing by contrast.
Quick recap: the numbers to know
- Individual plan: $15.99/month or $159.99/year
- Family plan: $26.99/month (up to 5 family members 13+)
- Student plan: $8.99/month (verification required annually)
- Premium Lite: $8.99/month (ad-free on most videos, no Music)
- Free trial: 1 month for $0 for new eligible members
- YouTube Music: Included with individual and family Premium plans — 300M+ tracks
YouTube Premium isn’t a perfect product. It’s gotten pricier every few years, and Google’s communication around it has occasionally been clumsy. But as a pure quality-of-life improvement for anyone who spends serious time on the platform, it’s become harder to dismiss — especially now that the free alternative involves sitting through increasingly aggressive ad breaks while the platform plays catch-up with its own bugs.
If you watch a lot of YouTube, the free trial is worth trying. After a month of uninterrupted videos, you’ll know whether it’s for you.
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