Tired of YouTube Ads? Here Are 10 Free Ways to Watch Without Them YouTube Premium keeps getting pricier and free accounts are seeing more unskippable ads, so tools like DuckDuckGo, NewPipe, LibreTube and Brave now offer a free or cheaper way to strip ads from your viewing experience. Anyone who streams video on YouTube has noticed the same trend over the past while: free accounts are now facing longer, more frequent unskippable ad blocks, sometimes stacking two or three spots before a single video even starts. That pattern has only grown more noticeable since YouTube Premium was introduced. If sitting through three ads just to watch one clip has worn you down, and paying for a subscription isn't appealing either, a handful of reliable third-party apps and browsers can help you get a genuinely ad-free viewing experience, most of them without costing a cent. YouTube Premium and Premium Lite Let's get the obvious answer out of the way first. YouTube Premium remains the only method that removes every single ad from YouTube videos across every platform you use, including smart TVs, and no third-party tool can match that guarantee. But that reliability comes at a cost, and the cost keeps climbing. As things stand, an individual subscription runs $15.99 per month. If the whole household would benefit, there's a YouTube Premium Family plan at $26.99 a month that lets six users share the same ad-free experience. Like Netflix, though, YouTube Premium cracks down on password sharing, so the family plan only works if everyone lives at the same residential address as the account manager. YouTube also recently rolled out a cheaper tier called YouTube Premium Lite, priced at $7.99 per month, which promises an ad-free experience on most non-music videos. There's also a workaround worth trying: subscribing to YouTube Premium from a country where the price is much lower. In countries like Argentina, India, and Turkey, YouTube Premium costs less than $2 per month. Installing a VPN, switching your location, and attempting to subscribe at those cheaper rates is an option some people try. DuckDuckGo DuckDuckGo is fast becoming known as the anti-AI browser of choice. Unlike Chrome, this privacy-focused browser lets users decide exactly how many AI features show up in search and in the browser itself, with an option to switch all AI features off entirely. Now the company has built a YouTube ad blocker directly into the browser, on both desktop and mobile apps. DuckDuckGo integrates community filters straight from uBlock Origin, casting a wide net over the ads that appear on the platform. Because there's no third-party extension involved, there's no risk of the ad blocker being deprecated the way extensions can be on Chrome. DuckDuckGo is able to block most pre-roll and mid-roll ads on YouTube, and the feature is turned on by default on the desktop and iOS apps. On Android, it has to be switched on manually: make sure you're running the latest version of DuckDuckGo, then head to Settings, then Ad Blocking, and enable the ad blocker from there. NewPipe and SkyTube NewPipe is arguably the best way to watch YouTube ad-free on Android. It isn't a modded YouTube app; it's a separate, free, and open-source player built specifically for YouTube. NewPipe is lightweight but still covers the features people actually want, including background playback, picture-in-picture mode, and, of course, no ads whatsoever. The app isn't listed on the Play Store, but it can be downloaded directly as an APK installer from its website, or found on F-Droid, an alternative app store that hosts only free and open-source apps. NewPipe does let you import your existing subscriptions, but there's no way to sign in with an actual YouTube account. SkyTube is another free and open-source third-party YouTube app for Android, built along similar lines to NewPipe, and it also offers the basics people look for, including ad blocking and background playback. The catch is that SkyTube is a view-only app: there's no YouTube account sign-in, and therefore no sync feature across devices. It does have its own separate system for channel subscriptions and bookmarks, though. There's also a version called SkyTube Extra, also free, which supports the official YouTube player along with casting features. LibreTube LibreTube can be thought of as a NewPipe app with a far more modern interface, and it too is Android only. It comes with a bottom tab bar, updated icons, and generally smooth day-to-day operation, a level of polish that's often missing from other popular third-party YouTube apps. LibreTube supports SponsorBlock, so sponsored segments inside videos can be skipped automatically, and it adds extras like chapter selection. Like the others on this list, it's a free and open-source client. Firefox Browser with uBlock Origin Unlike Chrome on Android, Firefox actually supports extensions, and a single extension can completely change the YouTube experience. If using YouTube through the web is fine (offline access isn't possible this way), the popular ad blocker uBlock Origin can be installed to automatically block every ad on YouTube. To set it up, download the uBlock Origin add-on, then go to the Menu, open Add-ons, and enable uBlock Origin from there. Brave Browser For anyone who would rather not rely on an extension, using a browser with a built-in ad blocker is another route. Plenty of browsers on the Play Store and App Store claim to do this, but it's best to stick with one that's actually trustworthy. Brave Browser is a well-regarded privacy browser that comes with a strong ad-blocking feature working across Android, iPhone, and PC. As long as the Shields Up feature is enabled for YouTube, ads stop showing up in videos entirely. AdGuard for iPhone Because of how iOS is set up, there's no straightforward way to install an unofficial YouTube app the way Android users can. But for anyone comfortable watching YouTube through Safari, ads can be stripped out using Safari extensions, and several trustworthy apps handle this well. AdGuard is a solid option here, since it has a dedicated feature built specifically for removing all YouTube ads. Once the extension is set up, the process is simple: go to YouTube.com, tap the Share button, and choose the Block YouTube Ads (by AdGuard) option. SmartTube for Smart TVs Ads have been blocked in the browser and on the phone, but what's more irritating than sitting through long, unskippable ads while just trying to listen to some lo-fi music in the background? Thankfully there's a workaround for smart TVs too. Anyone with an Android-based smart TV or streaming box, note that Amazon Fire TV devices sold after October 2025 aren't supported, can install the SmartTube app, previously known as SmartTubeNext, to act as a full YouTube replacement. It has to be sideloaded manually, but once that's done, the ads disappear entirely. SponsorBlock SponsorBlock exists both as a standalone browser extension and as a built-in service inside a few of the YouTube replacement apps already mentioned, including LibreTube. It does exactly one thing: it crowdsources data on where sponsor segments appear inside videos and lets viewers automatically skip past those sections. If the channel being watched has any real popularity, there's a good chance SponsorBlock will already recognize where its sponsor segment falls. For anyone who can't stand sitting through yet another 45-second ad for Squarespace, this extension is built exactly for that problem. What this means for you If you're tired of sitting through unskippable ads on YouTube but don't want to pay $15.99 a month for Premium, these tools offer free or much cheaper alternatives. • Free options like DuckDuckGo, Firefox with uBlock Origin, Brave, NewPipe, SkyTube and LibreTube can save you the full cost of a YouTube Premium subscription. • If you still want the official ad-free experience, subscribing to YouTube Premium through a VPN set to a country like Argentina, India or Turkey can cut the price to under $2 a month instead of $15.99. • SmartTube and SponsorBlock users get the added benefit of skipping sponsor segments and long ad breaks even on smart TVs, which is especially useful for background or music listening. Questions & Answers 1. How much does YouTube Premium cost? The individual YouTube Premium plan is $15.99 per month, the Family plan is $26.99 for up to six users, and the cheaper YouTube Premium Lite plan is $7.99 per month. 2. How do you turn on DuckDuckGo's ad blocker on Android? Update to the latest version, then go to Settings and Ad Blocking to enable it manually, since it's only turned on by default on desktop and iOS. 3. Where can NewPipe be downloaded from? NewPipe isn't on the Play Store; it can be downloaded as an APK directly from its website or found on the F-Droid app store. 4. Can you sign in to a YouTube account in NewPipe? No, NewPipe doesn't support signing in with a YouTube account, though it does let you import existing subscriptions. 5. What's the difference between SkyTube and SkyTube Extra? SkyTube is a view-only app with no sign-in or sync feature, while SkyTube Extra supports the official YouTube player and casting features. 6. What does LibreTube offer that NewPipe doesn't? LibreTube has a more modern interface and adds SponsorBlock support along with extras like chapter selection. 7. How can ads be removed from YouTube on an iPhone? By setting up the AdGuard Safari extension and using the Block YouTube Ads (by AdGuard) option from the Share button on YouTube.com. 8. Which devices does SmartTube work on for smart TVs? SmartTube works on Android-based smart TVs and streaming boxes, but it does not support Amazon Fire TV devices sold after October 2025. 9. How can YouTube Premium be obtained more cheaply? Installing a VPN and setting the location to a country like Argentina, India, or Turkey can bring the price down to under $2 per month. 10. What exactly does SponsorBlock do? SponsorBlock crowdsources data on where sponsor segments appear in videos and lets viewers automatically skip past those sections. https://trendkia.com/en/guides/youtube-ke-vijnapanon-se-pareshana-hain-bina-paise-kharcha-kie-vidiyo-dekhane-ke-10-tarike-6566 TrendKia — Har trend, sabse pehle.