The viewing experience on YouTube may soon feel longer for millions of people watching on their televisions. The platform has approved a new advertising format that allows 30 second ads that viewers cannot skip when streaming on smart TVs and other big screen devices.
For users who rely on the free version of the service, the change could signal a tougher ad environment as Google deepens its advertising strategy across one of the internet’s most popular platforms.
YouTube expands ads for the big screen
YouTube has become a dominant source of entertainment on television screens. Many viewers now stream creator videos through apps built into smart TVs or devices such as Google TV.
Because the platform remains free for most users, advertising has long been the primary way it funds its operations and compensates creators. The new ad format reflects a shift toward bigger and longer ads designed specifically for television viewing.
The company confirmed that advertisers can now run 30 second non skip ads when people watch YouTube on TV devices. These ads will join existing formats such as 6 second bumper ads and standard 15 second commercials.
According to Google, its advertising system will rely on artificial intelligence to decide which ad format appears during a video. The system will automatically choose between shorter and longer ads depending on the viewer and the advertising campaign.
The company says this approach helps ensure ads reach the right audience while adapting to different viewing habits on large screens.
Free YouTube experience continues to change
The new television ad format is only one part of a broader shift taking place across the platform.
In recent months, YouTube has taken stronger action against ad blocking tools. Some viewers using ad blockers have reported that key features such as comments and video descriptions disappear when the system detects the software.
Other workarounds have also been restricted. Background playback through certain third party browsers was recently limited, closing a loophole that allowed some viewers to play videos without keeping the app open.
Meanwhile, users on mobile devices have begun seeing new advertising banners inside the video player interface. In some cases these ads remain visible until the viewer exits the video.
These changes reflect a steady push to tighten control over how ads appear and how viewers interact with them.
YouTube may be steering viewers toward subscriptions
The growing number of ads has sparked debate about whether the company is deliberately making the free version of the service less appealing.
YouTube has long offered a paid subscription that removes most ads while unlocking additional features. The main YouTube Premium plan includes background playback, video downloads and access to YouTube Music.
A lower cost option known as Premium Lite also removes ads from most videos but leaves out some of the extra features included in the full plan.
The new ad formats could encourage more viewers to consider those subscriptions. While 30 second unskippable ads may not appear during every video, the option now exists for advertisers to use them.
That possibility alone changes the viewing experience for free users, especially those who watch long videos or spend hours on the platform each week.
YouTube remains essential despite the changes
Despite growing frustration over ads, YouTube remains one of the most widely used platforms on the internet. Millions rely on it daily for tutorials, news, entertainment and creator driven content that cannot easily be found elsewhere.
The service also occupies a unique place in the streaming landscape. Unlike subscription platforms built around studio content, YouTube blends independent creators, live broadcasts and educational material in one massive library.
For now the free tier is unlikely to disappear. Advertising remains the foundation of the platform’s business model.
But with longer ads arriving on television screens and tighter limits on ad blocking tools, the balance between free access and paid convenience is shifting. For many viewers, the way they watch YouTube in 2026 may feel very different from the experience they remember just a few years ago.

