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Two New Features in YouTube Premium Lite Just Made the Pricier Tier Unnecessary

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As Lifehacker has previously argued, YouTube Premium is probably the best streaming service for most people. Ads can eat into your free time faster than you might realize, and because YouTube's user-generated videos can be quite short, they're especially annoying there—and blocking them without a paid subscription is tough.

YouTube Premium is also a bit pricey as streaming services go, at $14/month. Fortunately, the company also offers a "Premium Lite" plan that's much cheaper—and thanks to the recent addition of a few key features, it no longer pales in comparison to a full subscription. In fact, the $8/month YouTube Premium Lite may now be the best paid YouTube tier for most people.

YouTube Premium Lite is getting two of the more expensive tier's best features

Starting today, YouTube Premium Lite now offers both background play and download options on most videos, features that were previously exclusive to a full YouTube Premium plan. The update is currently rolling out, so it might take a little bit for it to reach you, but the change essentially gives you parity with a full YouTube Premium plan on the vast majority of YouTube content. According to YouTube, the company has "heard feedback about wanting these additional features included in the service," which prompted the change.

Now, for the same $8/month price, you can get most of the full YouTube Premium experience, normally a $14/month value. The only catch? You'll still get ads when streaming music and music videos, hence the "most videos" disclaimer. Ads also "may appear when you search or browse," but as for interruptions while watching non-music content? You should be in the clear.

YouTube Premium Lite benefits chart
Credit: YouTube

A full YouTube Premium account no longer makes sense for most users

Essentially, unless you're a big YouTube Music user, getting YouTube Premium Lite instead of a full-cost subscription is now a no-brainer. There are a few smaller bonuses you'll be leaving behind, like the ability to "Jump Ahead" (instantly skip frequently skipped parts of a video, usually ad reads), but your subscription will also be around half the price. You win some, you lose some.

The only real gap now, at least for me, is for households with lots of different YouTube viewers YouTube Premium Lite still only applies to one profile at a time, so if everyone in your household wants to have their own separate algorithms instead of sharing a profile, you'll need to get YouTube Premium Family, which costs $23/month, giving six people in the same household the benefits of a full YouTube Premium subscription. My husband and I have pretty different viewing habits, so we're unlikely to switch to this cheaper tier any time soon. But if you live alone or you're OK sharing a profile, you might as well save yourself some moolah.

Alternatively, you can also still get a YouTube Music Premium plan for $11/month. That removes ads and allows background play and downloads, but only for music and music videos. It's essentially the opposite of YouTube Premium Lite, and faces stiff competition from the likes of Spotify and Apple Music. Personally, I'd just pay the extra for a full YouTube Premium subscription, which has all the same benefits of YouTube Music Premium, but also works for non-music content and only costs $3/month more.

Still, while adding new features to Premium Lite is ultimately a discount, it does follow a move from YouTube to block people from accessing background play for free. Perhaps this is Google's attempt at a compromise?

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