Press Ctrl+Shift+R (Windows) or Cmd+Shift+R (Mac) to force a hard refresh, bypassing cached content. This fixes stale data causing playback issues.
YouTube actively blocks ad blockers and may show a black screen or error when one is detected. Temporarily disable your ad blocker or whitelist youtube.com. Common ad blockers include uBlock Origin, AdBlock Plus, and AdGuard.
On Chrome: Press Ctrl+Shift+Delete → Select "Cached images and files" + "Cookies and other site data" → Choose time range "All time" → Clear data → Reload YouTube. On Firefox: Press Ctrl+Shift+Delete → Select "Cache" and "Cookies" → Clear. On Safari: Safari → Preferences → Privacy → Manage Website Data → Remove YouTube.
On Chrome: Settings → System → Turn off "Use hardware acceleration when available" → Relaunch Chrome. On Firefox: Settings → Performance → Uncheck "Use recommended performance settings" → Disable Hardware Acceleration. This fixes black screen issues caused by GPU rendering conflicts.
Press Ctrl+Shift+N (Chrome) or Cmd+Shift+N (Mac) to open incognito. If YouTube works there, an extension is the culprit. Try disabling extensions one by one in your regular browser.
Click the gear icon in the video player → Select "Quality" → Try lowering from 1080p to 720p or 480p. High-definition video requires more bandwidth; reducing quality often fixes buffering on slower connections.
Go to Settings → Apps → YouTube → Storage. First tap Clear Cache (this removes temporary files without deleting your account). If problems persist, tap Clear Data (this will require you to sign in again). This is the most effective fix for YouTube freezing, buffering, or failing to load on Android.
Open Play Store → Tap your profile → Manage apps and device → Updates available. Find YouTube and tap Update. Old versions break as YouTube updates its API, so always run the latest version.
Go to Settings → General Management → Date and Time. Enable "Set Automatically" (or "Set automatically" on some devices). Incorrect system time causes SSL certificate errors that break YouTube and many other apps.
Switch between Wi-Fi and mobile data to see if one works better. If on Wi-Fi, try moving closer to your router or restarting your router. YouTube requires at least 500 Kbps for basic streaming, 2.5 Mbps for SD, and 5 Mbps+ for HD.
Long-press the YouTube app → Tap Uninstall → Go to Play Store → Search YouTube → Install. Reinstalling completely resets the app and often fixes persistent issues.
On iPhone with Face ID: Swipe up from bottom and pause → Find the YouTube card → Swipe up to close → Tap YouTube to reopen. On iPhone with Home button: Double-press home button → Swipe up on YouTube. This clears the app's in-memory state.
Open App Store → Tap your profile → Scroll to see available updates. If YouTube has an update, tap "Update". iOS apps must be compatible with your iOS version; older devices may need iOS updates too.
Long-press YouTube icon → Tap "Remove App" → Tap "Delete App" → Confirm → Go to App Store → Search YouTube → Tap download icon. iOS doesn't have a simple cache-clearing option, so reinstalling is the equivalent.
iPhone X or later: Press and hold power + volume down → Slide to power off → Press power to turn on. iPhone with Home button: Press and hold power → Slide to power off → Press power to turn on. A restart fixes most temporary app glitches.
If YouTube won't load at all, go to Settings → General → Transfer or Reset iPhone → Reset → Reset Network Settings. This clears Wi-Fi passwords and VPN settings that might be interfering.
Unplug the TV from the wall for 60 seconds, then plug back in. This fully clears the TV's memory and resets the network connection. For Fire TV: Hold the power button on the remote until "Shutting down" appears.
On Android TV/Google TV: Settings → Apps → YouTube → Clear cache. On Fire TV: Settings → Applications → Manage Installed Applications → YouTube → Clear cache. On Roku: Highlight YouTube → Press Star (*) → Remove channel (then add it back).
Uninstall the YouTube app from your TV's app store and reinstall from scratch. Smart TV apps frequently become outdated and need reinstallation to work properly.
Go to Settings → General → Time (or Date & Time on some TVs). Ensure "Set Automatically" is enabled. Incorrect time can cause SSL errors when connecting to YouTube servers.
This error typically occurs when there's a server-side issue or your IP is being blocked. Try: clearing your browser's cookies for YouTube, disabling any VPN or proxy services, using a different network (try mobile data), or waiting 30 minutes and trying again.
Your device can't reach YouTube servers. Check: Wi-Fi is connected and working, your router's firewall isn't blocking YouTube, your ISP isn't throttling video traffic, and DNS settings are correct (try Google's DNS: 8.8.8.8).
You're trying to watch a video that's geo-restricted. Solutions: Use a VPN set to a country where the video is available, or find an alternative video with similar content that isn't restricted.
This often indicates a corrupted cache. On mobile, clear YouTube cache as described above. On desktop, try a different browser after clearing cache. This error can also occur with very old browser versions — make sure your browser is up to date.
YouTube pauses automatically after a long period of inactivity to save bandwidth. It may also pause due to "Video interrupted by another app" alerts, a flaky internet connection, or the Auto-pause Reminders feature if you have it enabled in YouTube Settings. Check Settings → Playback → Autoplay for related toggles.
A black screen usually means the video player can't render the content. This is commonly caused by hardware acceleration conflicts in your browser, an outdated graphics driver, an ad blocker interfering with the player, or a corrupted app cache. Try disabling hardware acceleration in browser settings and clearing your cache.
Buffering occurs when your internet speed can't keep up with video playback. This happens with slow connections, network congestion, or when playing high-quality video (1080p, 4K) on slower connections. Try reducing video quality by clicking the gear icon in the player and selecting 480p or lower.
Yes. Some VPNs cause IP blocks or slow connections that prevent YouTube from loading properly. If you're using a VPN, try disconnecting it to see if YouTube works. You can also try a different VPN server location.
On the video player, click the gear icon → Quality → Select 480p or lower. Also close other applications using bandwidth, pause any downloads, and consider using YouTube's "Data Saver" mode if available in your app settings.