Sites Like YouTube: 12 Video Platforms Worth Your Watch Time
The coasting is the problem. Mid-roll ads now interrupt videos with the rhythm of network television, unskippable pre-rolls stack two deep, and the homepage increasingly serves Shorts the algorithm thinks you'll tolerate rather than the channels you subscribed to. Creators describe demonetization as a black box and watch their reach throttled whenever a thumbnail trips an unseen wire. The product still works — but it no longer feels like it is on your side.
Leaving YouTube entirely is unrealistic. Supplementing it with platforms that respect your attention, your wallet, or a specific corner of taste is not. These twelve are where the rest of video has quietly moved.
The 12 Best Alternatives to YouTube
The original home for filmmakers, animators, and anyone who cares whether their video looks like a video or like compressed sludge. No ads on playback, no algorithmic feed shoving Shorts at you, and embed players that creative professionals actually trust on their portfolio sites.
- No ads on playback, ever
- Professional-grade embed players trusted by creatives
- Clean interface with no algorithmic Shorts pressure
- Strong privacy and password-protection options
- Hosting tiers get expensive fast
- Not a discovery platform — you bring your own audience
- Smaller community than YouTube
Built by creators tired of YouTube's ad model — Wendover, Real Engineering, Lindsay Ellis, Patrick Willems and dozens more publish longer, weirder, ad-free cuts here. The catalog skews toward the educational and essayistic videos that YouTube's algorithm has been actively burying.
- Ad-free, longer cuts of essay/explainer videos
- Features creators YouTube's algorithm has buried
- Original Nebula-exclusive series and documentaries
- Flat subscription supports creators directly
- Catalog is narrow — mostly educational/essay
- No live or short-form content
- Requires paid subscription
Where live video actually lives. YouTube's livestreaming feels like an afterthought; Twitch's chat, subs, raids, and clip culture are the real-time community YouTube keeps trying and failing to replicate. Gaming is the anchor but Just Chatting, music, and creative streams have grown enormous.
- The standard for live streaming and chat culture
- Strong subs, raids, and clip ecosystem
- Huge library of gaming, Just Chatting, music, creative streams
- Real-time community YouTube can't replicate
- Revenue split is unfavorable to most creators
- VOD discoverability is weak
- Ad load has grown heavier in recent years
The French-built YouTube clone that has quietly survived since 2005, with looser content rules and a stronger international news and sports presence. A real fallback for finding clips that have been pulled from YouTube on copyright grounds.
- Strong international news and sports coverage
- Looser content rules than YouTube
- Good fallback for clips pulled on copyright grounds
- Free to use
- Smaller creator base than YouTube
- Ad load can be heavy
- UI feels dated
The home of creators who got demonetized, deplatformed, or just ideologically uncomfortable with YouTube's moderation. Heavy political and commentary slant, but also a meaningful library of viral clips, sports, and outdoor content with a much lighter ad load.
- Lighter content moderation
- Much lighter ad load than YouTube
- Home to creators demonetized elsewhere
- Decent library of viral, sports, and outdoor clips
- Heavy political and commentary slant
- Smaller mainstream creator base
- Discovery and recommendations are weak
Built on the LBRY blockchain protocol, Odysee gives creators ownership of their content in a way YouTube structurally cannot. Smaller library, but a real refuge for documentary makers, independent journalists, and channels that have been demonetized into oblivion.
- Blockchain-based — creators own their content
- Censorship-resistant hosting
- Crypto tipping built in
- Refuge for demonetized documentary and journalism creators
- Smaller catalog than YouTube
- Crypto/wallet onboarding is friction for casual users
- Discovery is limited
Free, open-source, federated video hosting — anyone can run an instance, and instances can talk to each other. No central algorithm, no ads, no ownership by a trillion-dollar parent. The closest thing to a public-broadcasting model the open web has produced.
- Free and open-source
- Federated — no central algorithm or owner
- No ads, ever
- Closest thing to public-broadcasting model online
- No central catalog — quality varies by instance
- Needs technical know-how to self-host
- Much smaller audience reach
If YouTube Shorts is the reason you are looking elsewhere — because it is bad — TikTok is where short-form actually works. Better discovery, better editing tools, and a creator economy where someone with 10,000 followers can still get a video pushed to a million people.
- Best-in-class short-form discovery
- Strong editing tools built into the app
- Small creators can still go viral
- Genuinely better feed than YouTube Shorts
- Privacy and data concerns around ByteDance ownership
- Algorithm can be addictive by design
- Long-form content is not really viable
For anyone using YouTube as a free learning library, MasterClass is what the production-value end of educational video looks like when someone actually pays for it. Aaron Sorkin on writing, Gordon Ramsay on cooking, Annie Leibovitz on photography — none of which YouTube tutorials really compete with.
- High production-value structured courses
- Taught by genuinely top-tier instructors
- No ads, no algorithm churn
- Good for self-learners who want depth
- Annual subscription is expensive
- Celebrity instructors prioritize inspiration over rigor
- Limited catalog vs. free YouTube tutorials
The de facto rescue plan for creators tired of YouTube's monetization roulette — direct subscriber payments, video hosting, and members-only feeds. Many of your favorite YouTubers' best work increasingly lives behind a Patreon paywall, not on the main channel.
- Direct creator support with predictable income
- Ad-free, members-only video and posts
- Bonus and uncut content not available on YouTube
- Works for almost any creator type
- Each subscription is a separate monthly cost
- Discovery is weak — you bring your own audience
- Fees and payment processing reduce creator take
Linus Tech Tips' answer to YouTube's monetization headaches — a creator-owned subscription platform built specifically so tech, science, and hobby creators can publish 4K, ad-free, uncensored versions of their videos a few days early. Smaller catalog, much higher signal.
- 4K, ad-free, uncensored versions of videos
- Early access to creator content
- Creator-owned, aligned incentives
- High signal-to-noise for tech/hobby viewers
- Very limited catalog of creators
- Requires paid subscription per creator group
- Not a general-purpose video platform
The aggressive Twitch challenger that pays creators a 95/5 revenue split and runs lighter on content moderation. Live-first like Twitch, but with a clear pitch to creators feeling squeezed by both YouTube Live and Twitch's policies.
- 95/5 revenue split favors creators heavily
- Lighter moderation than Twitch or YouTube Live
- Fast-growing live-streaming community
- Free to watch
- Lighter moderation has attracted controversial content
- Much smaller audience than Twitch
- Monetization sustainability is unclear long-term