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Last updated: April 2026. Always check the developer’s GitHub or repository for the latest compatibility with YouTube version 19.x+.
Removes all standard overlay, pre-roll, and mid-roll video advertisements.
YTLite+ focuses on the essentials that users actually want, stripping away the experimental features that often cause apps to get revoked or crash.
DriftyWind is a reputable developer in the community.
(For the daily driver category). It is currently the gold standard for users who just want an ad-free, smooth YouTube experience on iOS without the headache of constant crashes.
Among jailbreak and sideloading enthusiasts, YTLite+ is viewed as a “user rights” tool—restoring local control over a web service. Developers like DriftyWinds typically reject donations and release code under open-source licenses (often MIT or GPLv3) to avoid commercialization.
For years, Driftywinds watched as the Great Video Archive—a place everyone used but everyone complained about—grew bloated. It was filled with "Recommended" towers that blocked the view, "Ad-Bots" that screamed at passersby, and heavy tracking anchors that slowed everyone to a crawl.
Last updated: April 2026. Always check the developer’s GitHub or repository for the latest compatibility with YouTube version 19.x+.
Removes all standard overlay, pre-roll, and mid-roll video advertisements.
YTLite+ focuses on the essentials that users actually want, stripping away the experimental features that often cause apps to get revoked or crash.
DriftyWind is a reputable developer in the community.
(For the daily driver category). It is currently the gold standard for users who just want an ad-free, smooth YouTube experience on iOS without the headache of constant crashes.
Among jailbreak and sideloading enthusiasts, YTLite+ is viewed as a “user rights” tool—restoring local control over a web service. Developers like DriftyWinds typically reject donations and release code under open-source licenses (often MIT or GPLv3) to avoid commercialization.
For years, Driftywinds watched as the Great Video Archive—a place everyone used but everyone complained about—grew bloated. It was filled with "Recommended" towers that blocked the view, "Ad-Bots" that screamed at passersby, and heavy tracking anchors that slowed everyone to a crawl.
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