YouTube users can save videos for offline viewing through several methods, with the platform’s official subscription service remaining the primary legal option.
According to YouTube, the most straightforward method is through YouTube Premium, which allows users to download videos directly within the app or browser for later viewing without an internet connection.
A subscription to YouTube Premium costs about $14 per month and also includes ad-free viewing and background playback on mobile devices. A lower-cost tier, YouTube Premium Lite, does not include offline downloads.
To download a video using YouTube Premium on desktop, users must log in, open a video, click the three-dot menu, and select “Download.” On mobile devices, the option appears either under the video title or in the overflow menu.
Downloaded videos are stored within the YouTube app or supported browser environment and cannot be transferred to other media players. YouTube notes that offline access is maintained only if the device reconnects to the internet at least once every 30 days.
“You can access your downloads as long as your device connects to the internet periodically,” YouTube states in its help documentation.
The platform restricts offline files to its own ecosystem, meaning users cannot export downloaded videos to external applications such as VLC or share them directly outside the service.
Some third-party tools and browser extensions also exist that allow video downloads, but these methods may violate YouTube’s Terms of Service depending on usage and content rights.
YouTube’s Terms state that users are not allowed to “access, reproduce, download, distribute, transmit, broadcast, display, sell, license, alter, modify or otherwise use” content unless explicitly permitted by the platform or copyright holders.
Legal use depends on context, including permissions or exceptions such as fair use or Creative Commons licensing. Users searching for reusable content can filter YouTube results under the Creative Commons category to identify videos with reuse permissions.
Despite alternative tools available online, YouTube Premium remains the only officially supported method for offline viewing within the platform’s rules.

