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YouTube Premium is quietly winning the war against ad blockers

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Why This Matters

YouTube Premium's rapid growth and surpassing ad revenue highlight a strategic shift in the platform's monetization approach, emphasizing paid subscriptions over traditional ad-based income. This trend underscores the importance for the tech industry to innovate in content monetization and adapt to user preferences for ad-free experiences. For consumers, it signals a broader acceptance and value in paid subscriptions for uninterrupted content access.

Key Takeaways

Joe Maring / Android Authority

TL;DR YouTube’s Premium subscribers are increasing at a faster rate than ever.

The revenue from YouTube Premium has surpassed that from ads on the platform.

It appears that YouTube’s strife against ad blockers is finally paying off.

YouTube has been toiling hard to keep freeloaders away by inventing new ways to thwart ad blockers and force them to pay for a Premium subscription. Some of those tactics may be working, as suggested by the latest increase in YouTube’s paid subscribers, which the company revealed at a recent event.

During its Q1 2026 earnings call earlier this week, Google announced a new milestone for YouTube. CEO Sundar Pichai noted that the company gained 25 million subscribers in the last quarter alone, increasing the total number of paid subscribers to 350 million. This tally comprises subscribers across Google One, Gemini, YouTube Premium, and YouTube Music.

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While the executive didn’t announce specific increases for each paid service, he noted that YouTube Premium and Music saw the “largest quarterly increase in the total number of non-trial subscribers” since the launch of the service in 2018. While Google typically combines figures for all services, it revealed last month that YouTube’s paid services alone had reached 125 million subscribers, although the figure also included free trials.

In addition to Pichai’s official note, Google’s Chief Business Officer, Philipp Schindler, was quoted by CNBC as saying that YouTube’s paid subscriptions have become a bigger revenue source than ads on the platform.

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