When people talk about the “enshittification” trend—in which companies make their free offerings so awful that you’re almost forced to pay for the premium versions—Google-owned YouTube is often cited as its poster child.
Ads. Ads galore. So many ads. Un-skippable ads. Yes, YouTube has every right to make money. But my God—the ads. There are so many ads.
For years, the only official way out of this hellscape was coughing up for YouTube Premium. But Google has been widening the rollout of a cheaper sibling: YouTube Premium Lite.
At first glance, the pitch is simple: Pay less money, get fewer ads. But the actual calculation got a whole lot more interesting recently when Google quietly leveled up the Lite tier.
So if you’re trying to figure out whether to save a few bucks or stick with the full-fat experience, here is exactly how the two tiers stack up.
Pricing
The current standard U.S. pricing breaks down like so:
- YouTube Premium Lite: $9 per month
- YouTube Premium (Individual): $16 per month
You’re looking at a 44% savings if you opt for the Lite version. Over a year, that’s roughly $84 left in your pocket.
Slight catch: that’s if you’re paying by the month. YouTube Premium is also available annually for $160 (YouTube Premium Lite is monthly only), which equates to two free months.
Feature vs. feature
For a long time, choosing Lite meant giving up basically every creature comfort besides ad removal. That’s no longer the case. Google recently threw a bone to Lite subscribers by adding two massive features: background play and offline downloads.
Here’s how the two tiers stack up across the board:
- Main video ads: The full Premium experience gives you a 100% ad-free pass across everything on the platform. Lite, on the other hand, only guarantees ad-free viewing on most nonmusic content.
- Background play and downloads: Both tiers now let you lock your phone or save videos for a flight, but with Lite this capability is restricted to standard videos and completely cuts out music content.
- YouTube Shorts: Full Premium strips all ads from your vertical scrolling feed. With Lite, you’ll still occasionally run into ads while browsing Shorts.
- YouTube Music: Full Premium bundles in the complete, ad-free stand-alone music streaming service. Lite gives you absolutely nothing here: no app access, no background music streams.
- Power-user perks: Features like “Jump Ahead” (which uses AI to skip straight to the best part of a video), mobile video queuing, and the enhanced 1080p Premium bit rate remain completely exclusive to the full-fat Premium tier. Lite users get standard playback only.
The biggest catch with Lite
Looking at that list, you might think, Why on earth would anyone pay $16 for the full version?
The devil’s in the phrasing. YouTube explicitly says Premium Lite offers ad-free viewing, downloads, and background play on “most videos.”
What does “most” mean? It means the algorithm draws a very hard line around music. Per Google, “Ad-free streaming, background play, and downloads aren’t available for music-focused content like official music videos, covers, and dance videos.”
If you use YouTube to watch official music videos, concert footage, fan covers, or even casual vlogs that happen to have a popular song playing in the background, you’ll still see ads. Furthermore, background playback and offline downloads won’t work on those videos.
You’ll also still see ads while searching or browsing the homepage, and occasionally while scrolling through Shorts.
Finally, Lite strips away the premium quality-of-life features. If you love the “Jump Ahead” feature that skips past creator intros straight to the good stuff, or if you like queuing up videos on your phone like a playlist, Lite locks you out. And you can forget about the stand-alone YouTube Music app entirely.
Which one’s best?
The decision comes down to how you use the platform.
Go with YouTube Premium Lite if:
You treat YouTube like an educational tool kit, a comedy club, or a cooking school. If your history is packed with tech reviews, video essays, and DIY tutorials, and you already pay for Spotify or Apple Music, Lite is an absolute home run. It gives you the core benefits—peace, quiet, and background listening—without forcing you to pay for a music ecosystem you don’t use.
Go with full YouTube Premium if:
YouTube is your primary jukebox. If you constantly have lo-fi beats, music videos, or DJ sets running in the background while you work, Lite will frustrate you within 10 minutes.
Premium is also the clear choice if you want a Family Plan (which Lite doesn’t offer) or if you’re a heavy mobile user who relies on video queuing and maximum video bit rates. It’s also the one to pick if you simply don’t want to see ads under any circumstances.
