YouTube is making moves on two fronts: expanding its Premium Lite plan to the U.S. and hitting a major milestone with 125 million paid subscribers across YouTube Music and YouTube Premium. That’s a 25% jump in just a year, signaling strong growth in its paid tiers.
A Cheaper Way to Watch Ad-Free—With Some Trade-Offs
At $7.99 per month, Premium Lite is a more affordable way to enjoy ad-free videos—but there’s a catch. It doesn’t include ad-free music, and it also lacks offline downloads and background play, making it a stripped-down version of the $13.99 YouTube Premium plan.
This tier is aimed at users who mostly watch gaming streams, podcasts, makeup tutorials, and other non-music content, without needing the extra perks that come with full Premium. YouTube has been testing Premium Lite in Germany, Thailand, and Australia, and those pilot markets will also get full access in the coming weeks.
The Take
- 125M Paying Subscribers: YouTube’s rapid subscriber growth shows there’s real demand for ad-free experiences, even as streaming prices rise
. - Balancing Ads & Subscriptions: YouTube makes billions from ads but is carefully expanding subscriptions to avoid undercutting its ad revenue (which hit $10.47 billion in Q4 2024).
- Streaming’s Shift to Tiered Pricing: Platforms are increasingly offering “pay for what you want” pricing. YouTube Lite could be a model for other streamers looking to attract budget-conscious users without cannibalizing their top-tier plans.
With streaming services increasingly adopting “pay for what you need” models, YouTube’s Premium Lite expansion is a sign of where the industry is headed.