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YouTube (for iPad)

 & Jeffrey L. Wilson Managing Editor, Apps and Gaming

Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology.

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YouTube returns to the Apple iPad with an app that closely replicates the online YouTube experience. - iPad Apps
4.0 Excellent

The Bottom Line

YouTube returns to the Apple iPad with an app that closely replicates the online YouTube experience.

Buy It Now

Pros & Cons

    • Easy navigation.
    • Smooth video streaming.
    • Some videos aren't accessible via the mobile app.
    • Can't select a video's resolution.

YouTube (for iPad) Specs

Free: Yes
Type: Personal

iOS 6's launch will be remembered for two Google-related issues: Apple's horrible, horrible Google Maps replacement, and the YouTube app's mysterious disappearance. The former is in the process of being transformed into something useful while the latter reappeared as a slick app that does a fine job of replicating the desktop YouTube experience.

The Emperor's New Clothes
The freshness is evident from the moment YouTube for iPad downloads to your tablet. The logo now features the official, familiar white, black, and red one with which we're familiar, not the odd television icon that served the original.

The new design now closely mirrors YouTube's desktop design—more so the previous layout than the recently released new look. YouTube for iPad features a black sidebar—revealed when you swipe the home screen video river from left to right—that displays the channels to which you're subscribed as well as content categories like Popular, Film & Animation, Music, and more. A drop-down menu grants access to your viewing history, purchases, favorites, and other familiar YouTube areas. In short, YouTube closes very little in translation from web site to mobile app.

The YouTube for iPad Experience
The main river contains a mix of videos pulled from your subscriptions as well as recommended titles based on your viewing history. A search box lives just north of it where you can key in a term or title. There's also a microphone icon, that when tapped, lets you perform voice searches—and it works well. Result pages let you toggle between videos and related channels, which aids in the overall content discovery.

Videos not only start up quickly, but stream smoothly, too. I experienced very little buffering moments. Like desktop YouTube, the video repository's mobile app lets you up-vote and down-vote clips, leave comments, flag videos, or add them to Watch Later, Favorites, and Playlists. You cannot, however, select the video resolution. You cannot, however, select the video quality or the intermediary "large" video size that's sized somewhere between the default YouTube video size and full screen. AirPlay support let me stream content from the app to an Apple TV box when they were connected to the same Wi-Fi signal.

My major gripe with YouTube for iPad is that there's some content that you can only access via the desktop web browser. Beck's "Gamma Ray" video—the colorful bizarre one featuring Chloe Sevigny doing her best go-go dancer impression, not the black and white version—cannot be found using the app. Mobile Safari, on the on the other hand, displays the result, but also mentions that the video uploader doesn't want the video to appear on mobile devices. That's not YouTube's fault, but it is something that should be noted.

Should You Tune Into YouTube for iPad?
If you spend any amount of time with the world's largest video repository, the answer is "yes." YouTube for iPad manages to captures most of what makes YouTube work. It's missing some content and options, but it's still a very capable video app that's worth downloading.

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Final Thoughts

YouTube returns to the Apple iPad with an app that closely replicates the online YouTube experience. - iPad Apps

YouTube (for iPad)

4.0 Excellent

YouTube returns to the Apple iPad with an app that closely replicates the online YouTube experience.

Get It Now

Buy It Now

About Our Expert

Jeffrey L. Wilson

Jeffrey L. Wilson

Managing Editor, Apps and Gaming

Since 2004, I've written about consumer tech for many publications, including 1UP, Laptop, Parenting, Sync, Wise Bread, and WWE. I now apply that knowledge and skill set as the managing editor of PCMag's apps and gaming team.

The Technology I Use

As a member of the App & Gaming team, I use a wide variety of apps and services. Google Drive is an essential file-syncing service for moving documents between team members in this work-from-home era. Scrivener has been an invaluable writing tool as I rework my fiction manuscript. YouTube Premium and YouTube TV deliver hours of entertainment (though I only use the latter service during the F1 and NBA playoff seasons).

In terms of hardware, I use a Lenovo Thinkpad Carbon X1 laptop for work and an Origin PC tower for playing PC games. I also have a Steam Deck, which lets me play my favorite titles under a shade tree. Of course, I have a smartphone, and the Google Pixel 9a is my handset of choice.

My main input devices are the Das Keyboard 4 Professional and Logitech MX Vertical Ergonomic Mouse, though I bust out the Hori Fighting Commander Octa or Hori Fight Stick Alpha when mixing it up in fighting games. I have a thing for arcade sticks. I collect Neo Geo AES games, too, but only if I can find the carts on the (relative) cheap.

For video and music consumption, I fire up my Lenovo Tab P11; it has a sharp screen and great Dolby Atmos-powered speakers. My Kindle Paperwhite has received much use, too. I have a standalone, Sony Blu-ray player connected to a TCL television when it's time to go full cinephile. I'm also a vinyl guy, so the Bluetooth-enabled Audio-Technica AT-LP60XBT keeps the wax spinning.

My first computer was a Commodore 64. Long live BASIC and retro computers!

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