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Streaming is about to get better on Netflix, YouTube and others, but only in one state

New law forces broadcast-style ad volume limits on streaming sites starting July 1, 2026

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California Governor Newsom signing
California Gov

What’s happened? California has banned loud ads on streaming services. Gov. Gavin Newsom signed SB 576 on October 6, 2025, and, starting July 1, 2026, streamers must keep ad volume in line with the show or movie.

  • It mirrors the FCC’s Commercial Advertisement Loudness Mitigation (CALM) standard that’s been in effect for broadcast and cable since 2012. The new law targets ad-supported services that serve Californians.
  • From July 1, 2026, commercials can’t play louder than the content they accompany on streaming sites like YouTube, Netflix, or Prime Video.
  • Several streaming services offer free or low-cost subscription tiers which are ad-supported.
  • A paid subscription doesn’t remove ads on some services, while prices continue to rise periodically.
  • Studios argued they already normalize loudness, but this makes voluntary self-standards into mandatory industry-wide standards.

This is important because: California tends to set the pace. By pulling streaming services under CALM-style limits, it turns a common viewer complaint into a rule with teeth. With enforcement locked to July 1, 2026, platforms will have to prove ad volumes match program loudness, not just claim they do.

  • Viewers should experience fewer volume spikes.
  • Streamers face real work across ad insertion and a variety of devices to measure and document compliance.
  • Expect the “California effect.” One state’s rule often becomes the de facto national standard.
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Why should I care? This fixes a small thing that ruins nights. SB 576 makes consistent ad volume a requirement and not a courtesy, bringing streaming in line with how broadcast has worked for years. With a firm start date, platforms need to show that their ad volumes don’t blow past the show’s.

  • Friendlier for sensitive ears, predictable levels help viewers with hearing aids or sensory sensitivities.
  • Remote stays on the table more often, with fewer jolting spikes between the show and the ad.
  • Consistency across devices, from phone speakers to soundbars, since platforms have to hit the same loudness target.

Okay, so what’s next? Platforms have a hard deadline on July 1, 2026. Any streamer serving Californians must ensure ads don’t exceed program loudness.

  • Even if you don’t live in California, expect to be affected as streamers won’t likely build a California-only stack, so fixes and patches would likely affect the catalog offered across the board.
  • If this news has got you in the mood for a streaming session, check out our round-up of the best new movies to stream.
Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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