YouTube is gearing up for a significant overhaul of its TV app, aiming to make it feel more like Netflix and better integrate paid content from third-party streaming services. According to The Information, the update—expected to roll out in the coming months—will prominently feature paid subscriptions on the homepage, making YouTube an even stronger contender in the streaming wars.
A More Streamlined Streaming Hub
At the center of this redesign is Primetime Channels, YouTube’s program that allows users to subscribe to streaming services like Paramount+, Max, and Crunchyroll directly within the app. Since launching in 2022, Primetime Channels has operated much like Amazon’s Prime Video Channels, offering paid content from external providers while giving YouTube a share of the revenue.
However, YouTube’s approach has been far from seamless. Right now, the paid content is buried within the Movies & TV tab, making it difficult for users to find—and for YouTube to scale the offering. The company even paused adding new services to Primetime Channels due to integration challenges. The new redesign aims to fix that by merging paid content with YouTube’s free, creator-driven videos, allowing users to browse all options from the homepage.
A More Traditional Streaming Experience
Beyond showcasing premium content, the redesign will introduce features aimed at making YouTube feel more like a traditional streaming service:
- Creators will be able to organize content into seasons, making it easier to follow serialized content.
- Shows will autoplay previews, a feature already used by Netflix, Prime Video, and other streamers to engage viewers.
- A unified interface will ensure that users don’t have to distinguish between content from paid services and YouTube creators. “The vision is that when you come to our [TV] app and you’re looking for a show, it’ll just blend away whether that show is from a Primetime Channel or that show is from a creator,” Kurt Wilms, YouTube’s senior director of product management, told The Information.
Why Now? YouTube’s Growth on TVs
The redesign comes at a time when YouTube’s dominance on TV screens is surging. The company recently revealed that TVs have surpassed mobile devices as the primary way people watch YouTube, reflecting a shift in how audiences engage with content. With more users turning to YouTube as a central entertainment hub, optimizing the TV app to serve both free and paid content makes strategic sense.
YouTube has already been testing new interface tweaks over the past year, signaling its intent to evolve beyond its roots in short-form, user-generated content. By fully integrating paid streaming subscriptions into the homepage, YouTube is positioning itself as a one-stop shop for both free and premium entertainment, taking direct aim at Netflix, Prime Video, and other streaming platforms.
While YouTube hasn’t confirmed an exact launch date, the upcoming changes could reshape how audiences navigate streaming services—without ever leaving YouTube.