YouTube TV’s multiview feature has always been a great idea, but it was held back by one frustrating limitation: Google decided what you watched, not you. But that changes now.
On April 28, 2026, YouTube CEO Neal Mohan announced the full launch of the custom multiview feature for YouTube TV, giving subscribers complete freedom to create their own multi-screen viewing experience from any live channel.
What can you actually do with the custom multiview feature?
Quite a lot, actually. YouTube TV’s new multiview builder lets you combine up to four live streams simultaneously. You can select from any channel that’s part of your subscription, including the add-on packages.
The builder can organize content into categories, including Recommended, Sports, News, Shows, Movies, and other live content. Users can freely pick across the entire channel library. The stream-stitching happens on YouTube’s servers rather than your device. In other words, no special hardware is required to run the feature.
To create a custom multiview, all you have to do is press the down arrow on your remote, select the multiview tab, start creating your multi-screen experience by selecting up to four channels, and enjoy.
Are there any restrictions that are worth knowing about?
The most significant unlocked combination is NFL Sunday Ticket, alongside regular YouTube TV channels, something that subscribers have been asking for over three years since the original multiview feature launched in March 2023.
Talking about the restrictions, only live content qualifies for creating a custom multiview. Recorded shows and video-on-demand titles can’t be added to the multiview (yet). Furthermore, YouTube has excluded a small selection of family-friendly content as well.
What else? Less than five percent of older devices won’t receive the full customization ability. They’ll still get a multiview builder, but limited to major events like the NFC and World Cup. Anyway, the rollout for YouTube TV custom multiview began for subscribers on April 23, 2026, and is now officially rolling out for the vast majority of users.

