YouTube has started enforcing its long-ignored rule for Premium Family plans. The company is now flagging accounts that are part of a family group but do not live in the same household as the plan manager.
The YouTube Premium Family plan is priced at $23 per month in the US and Rs. 299 per month in India. It allows up to five additional members to share the benefits, including ad-free YouTube and YouTube Music. On paper, all members are supposed to live at the same residential address. This requirement has been around for a while, but Google never made much effort to enforce it. That is now changing.
Several users, including one quoted by Android Police, have reported receiving an email with the subject line “Your YouTube Premium family membership will be paused.” The notice warns that their membership will stop in 14 days because YouTube detected they were not living in the same household as the family manager. Once paused, users will remain part of the family group but lose Premium features, effectively falling back to ad-supported YouTube.
YouTube does a 30-day “electronic check-in” to confirm location, but until now, failing this check rarely had consequences. The new enforcement suggests the company wants to close loopholes that allowed friends in different cities—or even countries—to share a single subscription.
Interestingly, this move comes shortly after YouTube began testing a two-person Premium plan. The timing makes it clear that Google wants to push people into paying separately, instead of bending the rules of the Family plan.
The crackdown is not widespread yet. Many users in similar situations have not received warning emails, though some Reddit users have reported losing access after the 14-day notice.
This is not the first time YouTube has upset users with strict enforcement. Last year, the company aggressively pushed unskippable ads, tested ad-blocker detection, and experimented with increasing Premium pricing in some regions. The new household rule enforcement looks like another step in tightening revenue streams.
It will be interesting to see how users react. Family sharing outside one home is a common practice, not just for YouTube but also for services like Netflix, Spotify, and Apple Music. Netflix’s crackdown on password sharing faced backlash, but it also boosted subscriptions. YouTube may be aiming for the same outcome, even if it annoys long-time Premium subscribers.
For now, if you are on a Family plan with members living in different households, you may want to keep an eye on your inbox. A 14-day warning email could be on its way.
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