
UPDATE: Feb. 10, 2026, 3:40 p.m. EST After publication, YouTube clarified that the lyrics restriction is part of a limited experiment affecting only a small percentage of ad-supported users.
YouTube Music is rolling out new community-focused features aimed at superfans and expanding its use of paywalls, including a requirement that users subscribe to Premium to view full song lyrics.
According to reporting from 9to5Google, YouTube Music has begun enforcing a lyrics paywall globally after months of testing. Free users are now limited to viewing lyrics only a handful of times before being prompted to subscribe to either YouTube Premium or YouTube Music Premium. Once that limit is reached, lyrics are partially blurred and cannot be scrolled unless the user upgrades.
The company offers five free lyric views before the restriction takes effect, signaling a clear shift toward monetizing previously free features. The change isn't for every free user, and YouTube says the limit on lyrics access will change weekly or monthly.
"We are running an experiment with a small percentage of ad-supported users that may impact their ability to access the lyrics feature repeatedly," a YouTube spokesperson told Mashable over email. "We often run experiments on YouTube Music to better inform our decisions around feature improvements. The majority of our global users will not see any changes to the lyrics feature."
The move comes as YouTube Music is simultaneously positioning itself as a more social and fandom-driven platform. As Mashable previously reported in August, the service recently introduced Spotify-like features such as comments on albums and playlists, shared "taste-matching" playlists that update daily, and artist-focused tools like milestone badges and live event notifications through a partnership with Bandsintown.
YouTube Music Premium currently costs $10.99 per month in the U.S., while the broader YouTube Premium subscription runs $13.99 and includes ad-free viewing across YouTube, background playback, offline downloads, and access to experimental AI features. Google has reported more than 325 million paid subscriptions across its consumer services, with YouTube playing a major role in that growth. In 2025 alone, YouTube generated more than $60 billion in revenue from ads and subscriptions combined.
Still, the decision to gate lyrics behind a paywall may feel like a step backward for some users, particularly as competitors like Spotify continue to offer full lyrics for free.
UPDATE: Feb. 10, 2026, 2:20 p.m. EST This article was updated to include a response from a YouTube spokesperson.