Skip to main content

How to hide a channel on YouTube TV

View of the interface for YouTube TV.
Phil Nickinson/Digital Trends

YouTube TV has lots of channels. About 100 of them, more or less, in the base plan, all for a single fee every month. It's as competitive a lineup as you'll find in live, streaming television (also known as linear TV in 2022), and that's just one of the reasons YouTube TV is the most popular service in the U.S.

Recommended Videos

Difficulty

Easy

Duration

5 minutes

What You Need

  • YouTube TV subscription

  • Web browser

  • Or a phone or tablet

But — and hear us out here — what if you don't actually need all 100 channels. What if having fewer channels actually leads to a better YouTube TV experience? It's not only possible — it's absolutely something you should do.

YouTube TV has several options for the way your list of channels appears. There's a default list, which serves things up as YouTube TV deems fit. You also can change things to "Most watched," which will adjust channels by what you watch more often. Or you can order the list alphabetically.

For our money, though, it's all about the custom list. That's the method by which you can put things in any order you want. And even better — you can hide channels you know you'll never watch.

How to hide a channel in a web browser

Adjusting your custom channels list in YouTube TV is simple, and takes as long as you want it to. You can spend all day rearranging things, and hiding channels all you want. Or you can just hack away. (Here's a direct link to get started.)

On big caveat here, however: YouTube TV occasionally adds new channels. When that happens, they'll end up at the bottom of your custom list, and in an inactive state. That is, you have to manually enable them if you want to watch them.

Step 1: In a web browser, go to tv.youtube.com.

Step 2: Click your profile picture in the top right.

Step 3: Choose Settings from the drop-down options.

Step 4: Click on Live Guide in the navigation on the left.

Step 5: To disable a channel, click the red checkmark so that it disappears. Click the empty circle to enable a channel. To rearrange the order of channels, grab the two-lined handles on the left and drag up or down.

Screenshot of YouTube TV channels list.
Screenshot

How to hide a channel from a phone or tablet

This is pretty simple, too, and it works the same way whether you're on a phone or tablet, or on Android or iOS.

Step 1: Open the YouTube TV app on whatever device you've got.

Step 2: Tap the Live button.

Step 3: Tap the Sort button.

Step 4: Tap the Edit button next to Custom.

YouTube TV custom channel sort on an iPhone.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 5: Uncheck any channels you don't want to appear. Also, you can rearrange the order of the channels by holding the handles on the right and then dragging up or down.

And that, folks, is how you hide channels from your YouTube TV list. It's not that they go away forever (you can add them back whenever you like), and, yes, you're still paying for them. It's just that they're not taking up room in your live guide, which is nice. (Interesting, though, is that YouTube TV will still recommend shows on your "Home" page even if you've hidden that channel.)

Note that you can flip between any of the ordering options in your YouTube TV app. But to edit the custom list, you'll have to hop into a web browser. That's just how it is.

Phil Nickinson
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Phil spent the 2000s making newspapers with the Pensacola (Fla.) News Journal, the 2010s with Android Central and then the…
You Asked: Black bar mystery solved and virtual mode explained
You Asked

On today’s You Asked: Why dumb TVs are practically extinct and what it means for you. Plus, we dive into what Samsung’s virtual mode really does in its soundbars and tackle the age-old question: Why do some movies have black bars on certain streaming services but not others — even when it’s the same movie?
Black bars: sometimes there, sometimes not

Saud writes: I have a question that’s been frustrating me for a while. I have an LG G4 77-inch OLED. Some movies and shows fill my entire TV screen (no black bars), while others don’t. For example, while watching the John Wick series on Lionsgate Play, the first three movies were full screen, but John Wick: Chapter 4 had black bars. Why is that? It feels frustrating and even disappointing when the full screen isn’t used -- like I’m not getting the most out of my TV. I’ve read this has to do with aspect ratios, but is it really the director’s choice, or are streaming platforms altering content to fit? If they do adjust it, does that affect the viewing experience?

Read more
How to cancel Philo
Philo on Vizio smart TVs.

These days there are more streaming services out there than you can shake a stick at. Philo is one of the best live-streaming options out there, delivering access to dozens of channels filled with the shows and movies you want to watch. However, not all streaming services and built equally. If you've decided to cancel your Philo subscription, then it's worth knowing how to get it done without any hassle.

Thankfully, Philo has made canceling the service easy. Along with an internet connection, you just need to remember where you signed up in order to cancel.

Read more
YouTube TV prices are going up again in 2025
YouTube TV on Roku.

"Nothing is certain except death and taxes," Benjamin Franklin apparently said in 1789. If he were alive today, he may very well have added, "... and streaming subscription price increases." Yes, that's my way of saying that -- despite reports to the contrary -- YouTube TV is jacking the price of its base subscription by $10 per month starting January 13, 2025, according to the following email sent to customers on December 12:
YouTube TV has always worked hard to offer you the content you love, delivered the way you want, with features that make it easy to enjoy the best of live TV.

‌To keep up with the rising cost of content and the investments we make in the quality of our service, we’re updating our monthly price from $72.99/month to $82.99/month starting January 13, 2025.

Read more