YouTube expands unskippable 30-second ads to TVs after $40 billion revenue year

March 14, 2026 in News by RBN Staff

 

Source: TechSpot.com

Connected TVs become YouTube’s next major ad battleground

 

LOOKING AHEAD: YouTube’s ad business has outgrown nearly every major media company – and now its ads are about to become harder to avoid. After a record-breaking year in which YouTube pulled in $40.4 billion in ad revenue, surpassing the combined totals of Disney, NBC, Paramount, and Warner Bros. Discovery, Google is expanding how it delivers those ads to viewers watching on television.

The next phase of Google’s strategy is unskippable, 30-second commercials on YouTube’s TV app. The move nods directly to the legacy television experience YouTube has steadily displaced: longer, linear-style spots meant to capture viewers who now stream the platform’s content from their couches instead of their phones.

According to Google, the new format will appear only on connected TVs, the fastest-growing segment of YouTube’s audience. Google says its AI-driven ad system dynamically chooses among 6-second bumpers, 15-second traditional ads, and these new 30-second unskippable TV placements to optimize engagement and reach. The company frames the change as a benefit for advertisers, allowing them to reach viewers in what it calls a “relaxed, living-room setting.”

For users, however, it’s a noticeably different experience. Ads that once could be skipped after a few seconds will now run in full, reviving the kind of commercial breaks many people thought streaming had left behind. Those who prefer shorter or skippable interruptions might have only one alternative: a YouTube Premium/Lite subscription, which offers an ad-free experience at a higher price.

The timing of YouTube’s ad expansion shows how much the advertising landscape has shifted. In 2025, YouTube overtook the major Hollywood studios in ad revenue, reversing the gap from the previous year’s totals. The platform’s $40.4 billion haul exceeded the combined $37.8 billion generated by the four studios – a milestone that highlights how deeply digital video has eroded traditional broadcast and cable advertising.

Data courtesy of App Economy Insights

Alphabet, Google’s parent company, reported total YouTube revenue of roughly $60 billion for the year, with subscriptions like YouTube TV, Premium, Music, and NFL Sunday Ticket contributing a sizable portion. Advertising, though, remains the engine of its business, drawing marketers eager to reach younger, highly engaged streaming audiences.

While YouTube’s ad revenue still trails Meta’s $196.2 billion, its position as the dominant video advertising platform is solidifying. MoffettNathanson, the research firm that first flagged YouTube’s ascent past Disney, called the company “the new king of all media,” a sentiment echoed by Wall Street analysts tracking audience fragmentation across digital and traditional channels.

That rise hasn’t come without friction. YouTube has stepped up enforcement against ad blockers, testing new ways to detect and disable them while funneling frustrated users toward its paid tiers. With the expansion of unskippable ads on TV, Google appears to be experimenting with the boundaries of viewer tolerance – testing how far its audience will go before paying to opt out entirely.