YouTube has started tightening its grip on Premium Family subscriptions, adopting a strategy that mirrors Netflix and Disney+ by targeting accounts spread across multiple locations.
YouTube has started warning users who don’t share the same household as their family plan manager. The alerts give them 14 days before premium access is suspended. While flagged accounts remain in the family group, perks such as ad-free viewing and background play are paused, according to the source.
Regular YouTube access continues, but only with ads. To restore full benefits, users must contact Google support and verify that they live at the same address as the plan manager.
This shift enforces a rule that’s always been buried in YouTube’s terms: all members of a Premium Family plan must reside under one roof. The policy itself isn’t new, but enforcement has been lax until now. YouTube conducts periodic location checks roughly every 30 days; now, users are beginning to see real consequences when accounts don’t match the family manager’s location.
Streaming rivals have already taken similar steps. Netflix’s crackdown on password sharing initially drew frustration but ultimately boosted subscriptions. Disney+ and others have also followed suit. YouTube’s move suggests the platform is now serious about closing loopholes that allow users to split the cost of Premium with friends or relatives outside their homes.
If you’re part of a shared Premium Family plan and want to avoid interruptions, here are a few steps you can take:
With this change, YouTube is signaling that its family plan is no longer meant to stretch across households but to operate exactly as the name implies, within a single family home.