Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. News

YouTube TV now lets you create the multiview layout of your dream

YouTube TV subscribers have spotted a major Multiview upgrade in the wild

Add as a preferred source on Google
Computer, Computer Hardware, Computer Keyboard
Zulfugar Karimov / Pexels

YouTube has a Multiview feature, which lets you watch up to four live streams simultaneously on a single screen. Previously, you were stuck with preselected channel combinations that were mostly limited to live sports but it’s soon going to change.

The platform recently used Multiview to stream Coachella, so viewers could watch multiple stages at once. Now, Reddit users are spotting the same Multiview feature getting a major upgrade inside YouTube TV, and it looks like a game-changer.

What is the new YouTube TV Multiview upgrade?

Redditors were the first to notice the change, sharing screenshots of a new Multiview selection menu that opens up the entire YouTube TV channel library. You are no longer locked into whatever combinations YouTube pre-selected for you.

Recommended Videos

The updated interface lets you browse channels by category, including Recommended, Sports, News, TV Shows, and Movies, and place any live channel into your grid. Up to four streams can run simultaneously on a single screen.

The feature works within the YouTube TV app on streaming devices like Roku, Google TV, and Apple TV, and works best on larger screens where four streams have enough room to breathe.

How to access the new Multiview on YouTube TV

According to 9to5Google, you can open a live stream inside the YouTube TV app by pressing the down arrow on your remote. On mobile, the same can be done by tapping the video player. A menu will appear with an “Add to multiview” option, which opens the new selection interface.

YouTube confirmed this upgrade was coming back in January 2026, however, this is a staged rollout, so not every subscriber will see it right away. Meanwhile, platform is also rolling out AI likeness detection tech to crack down on celebrity deepfakes and has quietly raised the price of YouTube Premium.

Manisha Priyadarshini
Manisha is a Writer at Digital Trends, covering the latest in tech, science, AI, gaming, and entertainment. As a Computer…
Old tech keeps coming back because new tech got annoying and we miss simpler times
Dumb phones, discs, cameras, and retro consoles are cycling back because modern tech got too needy for its own good
Toned picture of retro cassette player and earphones on tabletop.

Old jeans and old sneakers get a pass because fashion is cyclical. One year something looks dead, a few years later it’s back with a better markup and a straight-faced explanation about authenticity.

I’m starting to see consumer tech the same way. The revival isn’t limited to one corner of the junk drawer, either. It’s showing up in phones, cameras, audio gear, movies, and games. A tiny camera dangling from a wrist has more personality than another glass slab taking overprocessed night-mode shots.

Read more
Oppo is building camera phones like the smartphone race never ended
Oppo Find X9 Ultra Back

The flagship smartphone race has become a little too polite, especially when it comes to mobile photography. There was a time when the conversation revolved around megapixel counts, sensor count, and wild zoom numbers. But over the last few years, that energy has cooled.

The biggest brands no longer behave like they are trying to shock the market. Companies like Apple and Samsung now focus more on refining image processing and fine-tuning the formula than on pushing camera hardware into genuinely outrageous territory.

Read more
Despite cutback rumors, Apple could still serve a performance carnival on iPhone 18
The performance gap between Apple's standard and Pro iPhones may shrink dramatically in 2026, and that's genuinely great news for most buyers.
Apple iPhone 17 Pro in Cosmic Orange next to the iPhone 17 Pro Max in Deep Blue

Apple loves keeping critics and reviewers on their toes. While we’ve heard whispers of cost-cutting on the iPhone 18 lineup, fresh supply chain intelligence from Taiwan (via Commercial Times) suggests that the company is cooking up one of its most hardware-centric upgrades in years.

At the core of the purported iPhone 18 lineup sits TSMC’s 2nm A20 chip, which is believed to be a generational leap from the 3nm process A19 series chips on the iPhone 17 and the iPhone 17 Pro models. 

Read more