The YouTube Premium Family plan just got a little less generous, especially if you’re not living with your “family.”
YouTube Premium Family plan starts verifying locations

YouTube has begun enforcing location-based rules for its Premium Family plan, which officially requires all members to live under the same roof. While this rule has existed for years, YouTube rarely enforced it. That appears to be changing fast.
Warning emails hit accounts outside the household
Some users report receiving emails with a stark message: “Your YouTube Premium family membership will be paused.” According to these notices, if your device doesn’t match the same physical location as the plan manager, you’ll lose your ad-free benefits in 14 days.
Losing access doesn’t mean being removed
If YouTube flags your account, it will keep you in the family group but disable your Premium features like background play and ad-free videos.
You can still watch YouTube, just with ads. To regain benefits, flagged members must contact Google support and confirm they live at the same address.
YouTube is following a familiar streaming strategy
Other services have already made similar moves. Netflix famously began restricting shared logins across households, sparking backlash but eventually driving subscriber growth. Hulu, Disney Plus, and others have followed suit. YouTube now appears to be following the same path.
What you can do if you’re on a shared YouTube Premium Family plan
If you’re worried your account might be affected, here are a few quick tips:
- Check that your Google account lists the correct home address
- Log in from the household Wi-Fi regularly
- Avoid using VPNs or travel modes that alter your IP address
- If you receive a warning, contact Google support early
YouTube runs periodic electronic check-ins about every 30 days to confirm that members are part of the same household. These background checks aren’t new, but until now, they rarely have had consequences. That grace period appears to be coming to an end.

