YouTube Rolls Out Option to Remove Video End Screens
YouTube launches a new hide end screens option, changing how viewers interact with video endings and creators plan engagement strategies.
YouTube is rolling out a new option that allows viewers to hide the end screen overlays that typically appear in the last seconds of many videos. The update, announced in the official blog post, aims to reduce distractions and improve the viewing experience—a shift with implications for content creators and brands betting on these interactive links.
A closer look at the hide feature on YouTube
YouTube's latest change affects the colorful pop-ups that often prompt users to subscribe, watch the next suggested clip, or visit a channel page. Now, whenever the end screen appears, a "Hide" button will be displayed in the top-right corner of the video on both mobile and desktop. Tapping this button instantly removes the overlays. To restore them before the video fully ends, viewers can click "Show."
There are a few important specifics. The hide option currently applies only to the video currently being watched—there's no global setting to disable end screens across all videos. YouTube notes this feature will not change how or where creators can add end screens through the platform's editing tools.
The rollout also coincides with the removal of the extra Subscribe button that used to appear when users hovered over a branded watermark on desktop playback, streamlining the call-to-action process for desktop viewers.
Key changes at a glance:
Hide button appears on end screen overlays for viewers
Overlays can be toggled back on with the Show button
Feature works per video, not globally
Subscribe button removed from branded watermarks on desktop
How this compares to previous YouTube updates
End screens have been part of YouTube's engagement playbook for years, giving creators and brands a way to direct traffic and increase watch time at the close of a video. Several experiments and user tests over the past few months paved the way for the hide option, which is now rolling out platform-wide.
The shift to give viewers greater control echoes broader trends in social media. Features prioritizing user experience are surfacing across platforms, including the recent upgrade to YouTube comment filters for creators, and other apps redesigning layouts to reduce friction.
What creators and brands need to know
YouTube's own analysis suggests this new hide feature will have minimal effect on end screen performance. Their global testing from March to July 2025 found viewership from end screens dipped less than 1.5%. While the majority of engagement remains intact, even slight changes could impact the most engagement-hungry brands and creators that rely on end screens to guide audiences to more content or prompt subscriptions.
Still, the change means creators may want to pay closer attention to the design and timing of their calls to action. With one less Subscribe button and less reliable end screen visibility, diversification in audience engagement tactics becomes more important.
Adjusting strategies in a shifting ecosystem
For individuals and small brands, this update is a reminder that platform-driven tweaks can reshape the way audience engagement works. Building interactive cues into video narration, overlaying creative on-screen graphics, or extending engagement to descriptions and pinned comments are alternative strategies to consider.
YouTube's move also arrives as other video and social platforms place renewed emphasis on seamless, less intrusive user experiences. That extends to rivals like Instagram, whose latest app redesign spotlights Reels and DMs for deeper engagement, shifting how creators keep viewers hooked across different content formats.
What to watch for next
YouTube will monitor how the feature affects viewing habits and end screen performance as more users access the hide option. The company historically adapts features based on continued data and creator feedback, so performance metrics in the coming months may influence future iterations—like introducing advanced controls or persistent viewer settings.
For creators and marketers, now is the time to test new engagement ideas and monitor analytics closely. The removal of certain overlays is subtle, but being proactive about evolving formats and viewer agency can sustain growth as platform dynamics shift.
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