🔴 BreakingApple

Apple Launches Full Video Podcasts to Challenge YouTube Industry Dominance

Native video is coming to Apple Podcasts this spring — a seamless watch-or-listen experience that puts Apple on a direct collision course with YouTube and Spotify.

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ObjectWire Technology Desk
February 18, 2026📖 5 min read

Apple is preparing to fundamentally reshape the podcasting landscape. The company is integrating a native video experience directly into the Apple Podcasts app this spring, already available in limited beta — positioning Apple as a serious competitor to YouTube's dominance in video podcasting and adding pressure on Spotify in a market both companies have been fighting over for years.

The move represents one of Apple's most aggressive strategic product pushes in the content space since launching Apple TV+. With over one billion active Apple devices worldwide and Apple Podcasts already pre-installed on every iPhone, iPad, and Mac, the distribution advantage Apple holds is enormous — and video is the next frontier it intends to conquer.

Apple Podcasts' native video feature is currently in limited beta and targeting a spring 2026 public launch. Users will be able to seamlessly switch between audio-only and full video playback — without ever leaving the Podcasts app.

What Apple Is Actually Building

Unlike Spotify's video podcast feature — which requires creators to upload separately and renders inside what is still fundamentally a music app — Apple's approach is being built as a first-class, native experience. According to reports and early beta feedback, the new Apple Podcasts video feature includes:

  • Seamless audio/video switching — lock your screen and it becomes audio-only. Unlock, and the video resumes. No scrubbing, no reloading.
  • Full-screen video playback across iPhone, iPad, Mac, and Apple TV, with adaptive quality based on connection speed.
  • Chapter and timestamp navigation carried over from audio podcasts, now synced with video segments.
  • Background audio continuity — video pauses, audio keeps playing. The behavior podcast listeners expect, finally applied to video.
  • Integrated subscriptions — creators on Apple Podcasts Subscriptions can gate video content behind paid tiers, competing directly with YouTube's channel memberships.
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Apple Podcasts reaches over 100+ million active listeners monthly across its installed base. It's one of the few apps guaranteed to be on every iPhone from day one — zero install friction for the video rollout.

The YouTube Problem Apple Is Solving

YouTube has quietly become the dominant platform for video podcast consumption over the past three years. The Joe Rogan Experience, Lex Fridman Podcast, All-In Podcast, and dozens of top-tier shows now generate as many or more views on YouTube as downloads on traditional platforms. For many listeners under 35, "watching a podcast" on YouTube is their podcast experience.

The problem for Apple is structural: as creators shifted to video-first production, the engagement, the algorithmic discovery, and the advertising revenue all flowed to YouTube — not Apple Podcasts. Apple is now attempting to reverse that dynamic by making video a native, frictionless feature of an app that already has a billion-device headstart.

Apple Podcasts doesn't need to win on algorithm. It wins on default. Every iPhone ships with it installed, and every podcast listener already knows how to use it. Video is the missing piece.

Spotify Is Also in the Crosshairs

Spotify has spent aggressively to own podcasting — acquiring Anchor, Gimlet, The Ringer, and exclusive deals with major creators — but its video podcast rollout has been inconsistent. Video shows on Spotify require separate uploads, remain locked to certain markets, and still feel like a secondary feature grafted onto a music app.

Apple's native video integration — combined with Apple Podcasts Subscriptions (launched in 2021) and deep iOS integration for notifications and widgets — creates a more cohesive creator-to-listener pipeline than Spotify currently offers. For independent podcasters who distribute across multiple platforms, Apple's offer is increasingly competitive.

What This Means for Creators

The video podcast race matters most to the creators who have to pick where to build their audience. Currently, the calculus looks like this:

PlatformVideo PodcastsDiscoveryMonetizationDistribution
🍎 Apple PodcastsNative (Spring 2026)Editorial + SearchSubscriptions, Ad Network1B+ devices pre-installed
▶️ YouTubeFull (Best-in-class)Algorithmic (dominant)AdSense, Memberships, Super Chat2B+ MAU
🟢 SpotifyPartial (select markets)AlgorithmicSAI Ads, Paid Subscriptions600M+ MAU

For established podcast creators already publishing RSS feeds to Apple Podcasts, the video upgrade requires minimal additional work — just uploading a video track alongside the existing audio feed. That low-friction onboarding could accelerate adoption faster than Spotify's video rollout, which required separate manual uploads.

Timeline: Apple Podcasts Video Rollout

Late 2025

Video Podcast Beta Begins

Apple quietly rolls out limited beta access to video podcasting within Apple Podcasts for select creators and devices.

Early 2026

Creator Outreach Expands

Apple begins actively recruiting top podcast creators and networks to publish video-enabled episodes natively in Apple Podcasts.

Spring 2026

Full Public Launch

Native video playback fully integrated into Apple Podcasts. Seamless switch between audio-only and full video for all users on iPhone, iPad, Mac, and Apple TV.

The Bigger Picture: Apple's Content Ambitions

Video podcasting isn't just a feature update — it's part of Apple's broader strategy to capture more of the attention economy it has long helped facilitate but not directly monetized. Apple TV+ showed the company could produce premium content. Apple Music showed it could compete in streaming. Apple Podcasts video is the next logical move: taking a platform with dominant pre-installed reach and adding the format that has the highest engagement.

YouTube's response will be critical. The platform has the algorithmic discovery moat, the creator monetization infrastructure, and the cultural identity as "where video podcasts live." But Apple has something YouTube cannot replicate overnight: the lock-in of the iPhone ecosystem, seamless cross-device continuity via Handoff and AirPlay, and the trust of audio-first podcast listeners who have never fully migrated to YouTube despite its video dominance.

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Apple doesn't need to beat YouTube at video. It just needs to be good enough that creators stop treating Apple Podcasts as a secondary distribution channel — and start treating it as their home base.

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Tags

#Apple#Apple Podcasts#Video Podcasts#YouTube#Spotify#Streaming#Podcasting#Spring 2026
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