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The Vision Pro YouTube app is here and it fixes the biggest annoyances

A native app lands two years late, adding features the browser version couldn’t deliver.

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Electronics, Screen, Computer Hardware
Apple

You can finally use YouTube on Apple Vision Pro without pretending Safari is good enough. YouTube released an official app for Apple’s mixed-reality headset on Thursday, closing one of the most obvious entertainment gaps on the device.

Before this, YouTube only ran through the web player, and that came with familiar headaches. The most annoying was offline viewing, there was no official way to download videos for later. If your Wi-Fi was spotty, or you wanted to watch on a flight, you were stuck.

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Now the experience feels like an actual app instead of a workaround. You get full access to YouTube’s catalog, plus the kind of video formats that make sense in a headset.

The Safari era is over

A native app changes more than the icon on your home view. It means YouTube can behave like it does on other platforms, with features that the browser version simply didn’t offer.

Offline downloads are the practical win. If you treat YouTube as background viewing, or you hop between rooms and networks, saving a few videos ahead of time is a quality of life upgrade. It’s the sort of basic capability that made the web-only setup feel unfinished.

It finally leans into the headset

The app also targets what Vision Pro is good at. It supports 3D playback and panoramic video, including 180 and 360 formats, so the headset isn’t limited to flat clips floating in space.

That matters because immersive video is one of the few things that can justify wearing a mixed-reality headset for longer than a quick demo. With the official app in place, it’s easier to turn those videos into something you reach for regularly.

Netflix is still missing

YouTube’s late arrival is both a win and a tell. Vision Pro can look and feel advanced, but the broader app lineup still lags behind Apple’s mainstream devices.

The Vision Pro gets YouTube two years after launch. Next up: Netflix? https://t.co/CNmxqBSjfW

— Mark Gurman (@markgurman) February 12, 2026

There’s also a platform note here. The Vision Pro app reportedly resembles the version that shipped last fall on Samsung’s Galaxy XR, which runs Google’s Android XR. For users, consistency is a good sign.

If you’ve been using third-party YouTube players on visionOS, this is your cue to switch. Some unofficial apps have been removed from the App Store over terms issues, and the official option lowers the risk of losing access. Install it, try a few 3D or panoramic clips, and keep an eye on whether Netflix finally shows up next.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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