YouTube TV’s New Multiview Is Rolling Out & You Can Now Add Any Channels You Want


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In a major win for live TV streamers, YouTube TV has quietly begun a limited rollout of its long-promised fully customizable multiview feature, allowing subscribers to mix and match up to four live channels on a single screen. The new “Add to multiview” option ditches the restrictive preset bundles the service previously offered, giving users unprecedented control over their viewing experience and was first spotted by Reddit users via Android Authority. Early testers are already calling it a game-changer, especially for sports fans who can now pair local regional sports networks with national broadcasts that were previously off-limits in multiview mode.

The feature is rolling out on an account-specific basis to a small group of U.S. users on both television sets and mobile devices. To access it, viewers simply start any live stream, press the down button on their remote (or tap the player on mobile), and select the new “Add to multiview” button. From there, they can browse categorized sections including sports, news, movies, shows, and more to pick up to three additional channels. All processing happens on YouTube’s servers, meaning even budget-friendly streaming devices can handle four simultaneous high-quality feeds without breaking a sweat.

YouTube first teased the fully customizable multiview back in early 2026, building on the original multiview debut in 2023 that was limited mostly to sports programming. The rollout fulfills a pledge from YouTube CEO Neal Mohan and marks another step in the service’s evolution from a simple cable replacement to a sophisticated, user-centric streaming platform.

YouTube TV launched on April 5, 2017, after being announced in February of that year at YouTube Space Los Angeles. Initially available only in five major markets—New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia, and San Francisco—the service offered roughly 40 live channels for $35 per month. It included major broadcast networks (ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox), popular cable staples like ESPN, CNN, and Disney Channel, plus unlimited cloud DVR storage—an unheard-of luxury at the time.

By 2018, YouTube TV had expanded nationwide, rapidly adding channels and local affiliates. Subscriber growth exploded as cord-cutters fled traditional cable. The service hit key milestones: integration of NFL Sunday Ticket in 2023, the addition of premium add-ons like Showtime and Starz, and repeated expansions of its channel lineup, which now exceeds 100 networks plus on-demand content from dozens of OTT services.

Pricing has risen over the years—from the original $35 to today’s base plan of around $83 per month—but the value proposition has grown with it. Unlimited DVR, multiple profiles, and features like picture-in-picture and multiview have kept YouTube TV competitive against rivals such as Hulu + Live TV, Sling TV, and Fubo. As of late 2025, the platform boasted more than 10 million subscribers, positioning it as one of the largest pay-TV providers in the United States.

YouTube has not yet announced a full public release timeline, but the positive early feedback and server-side efficiency suggest a broader rollout could happen quickly. The company is also reportedly preparing genre-specific channel packages later in 2026, further tailoring the service to individual tastes.

For longtime subscribers, this update feels like the culmination of nearly a decade of steady improvement. What began as a straightforward live TV streaming service has matured into a highly personalized entertainment hub. As more users gain access to the new multiview, YouTube TV is poised to solidify its reputation as the most flexible live TV option on the market—proving once again that the future of television isn’t about watching one thing at a time, but everything you want, exactly how you want it.

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