YouTube Premium is taking steps to enforce its policy against sharing family plan access outside of the primary household, a move that mirrors Netflix’s previous crackdown on password sharing.
According to YouTube’s terms, Premium Family members are required to “live within the same residential address as the family manager.” The company has started sending emails to select users with the subject line “Your YouTube Premium family membership will be paused,” signaling a phased rollout of this enforcement. One such email, as reported by Android Police, stated that YouTube detected activity suggesting the user does not reside at the same address as the plan manager.
The email warns recipients that their Premium membership will be paused in 14 days if they continue to use the service outside of the primary household. After the pause, users will remain in the family group but will lose their Premium benefits and revert to ad-supported viewing. To determine whether a user regularly accesses the service from the plan manager’s household, YouTube employs technology that monitors IP addresses over a 30-day period, similar to Netflix’s approach.
Although these rules have been in place for some time – YouTube confirmed in 2023 that using the same billing address would not circumvent the household requirement – enforcement has been relatively lax until now. The email provides contact information for users to dispute the pause, such as in cases where the detection was in error or if they genuinely reside in the same household.
This move is likely aimed at driving users towards individual subscriptions or YouTube’s recently introduced two-member Premium plans. Following its password-sharing crackdown, Netflix experienced a surge in subscriber numbers, a result YouTube is likely hoping to replicate by enforcing its household policy more strictly.




