How much data does YouTube actually use?  — Android Authority

How much data does YouTube actually use? — Android Authority

YouTube quality settings 1

Joe Hindy / Android Authority

YouTube is the world’s most popular video streaming website. It’s easy to fall down a rabbit hole and watch multiple videos in a row or even for hours on end. Some content is good enough to watch a television program. So it is quite easy to earn a decent data bill without any caution. There are some correct assumptions you can make right away. Lower resolution videos obviously don’t use as much data as higher resolution videos. However, do you really know how much data YouTube uses? If not, we intend to tell you.

RAPID RESPONSE

YouTube uses between 0.5-1.5 MB per minute at 144p and 150-375 MB per minute at 8K.


SKIP TO IMPORTANT SECTIONS

Our test method:

YouTube time viewed

Joe Hindy / Android Authority

Our testing method is actually quite simple. We used a total of three data monitoring tools. Android has a native data monitoring tool that we used. In addition, we measured the data with Google’s Datally app (Google Play) and GlassWire (Google Play). To get our numbers, we measured with all three apps and averaged the results.

We used this 8k, 60FPS, HDR Video Tour of Peru because Peru is a beautiful place, and also this video had every resolution available on YouTube with the fastest possible frame rate with HDR. We watched the video at a locked resolution for three minutes and measured the data. Unfortunately, not all resolutions are always available on mobile. So for 8k we used the Windows data monitor along with GlassWire’s pc client and the average of the results.

We also ended up measuring all the resolutions available on PC because we could and used Google’s Stats for Nerds option by right clicking on the video for the bitrate numbers. We also source recommendations for bitrates from YouTube because they probably encode videos in those birates anyway.

There were some problems. The PC I was using had no problem playing the 8k video. My monitor doesn’t support HDR though, so I don’t believe I’ve seen the maximum possible bitrates for 8k. Until we test further, our 8k numbers are estimates.


YouTube data usage, in numbers

YouTube quality settings 2

Joe Hindy / Android Authority

See the table below for our findings:
Video quality Resolution (pixels) Frame rate (FPS) Bit rate (average) Data used per minute Data used per 60 minutes
Video quality

144p

Resolution (pixels)

256×144

Frame rate (FPS)

30

Bit rate (average)

80-100Kbps

Data used per minute

0.5-1.5MB

Data used per 60 minutes

30-90MB

Video quality

240p

Resolution (pixels)

426×240

Frame rate (FPS)

30

Bit rate (average)

300-700Kbps

Data used per minute

3-4.5MB

Data used per 60 minutes

180-250MB

Video quality

360p

Resolution (pixels)

640×360

Frame rate (FPS)

30

Bit rate (average)

400-1,000Kbps

Data used per minute

5-7.5MB

Data used per 60 minutes

300-450MB

Video quality

480p

Resolution (pixels)

854×480

Frame rate (FPS)

30

Bit rate (average)

500-2,000Kbps

Data used per minute

8-11MB

Data used per 60 minutes

480-660MB

Video quality

720p (HD)

Resolution (pixels)

1280×720

Frame rate (FPS)

30-60

Bit rate (average)

1.5-6.0Mbps

Data used per minute

20-45MB

Data used per 60 minutes

1.2-2.7GB

Video quality

1080p (FHD)

Resolution (pixels)

1920×1080

Frame rate (FPS)

30-60

Bit rate (average)

3.0-9.0Mbps

Data used per minute

50-68MB

Data used per 60 minutes

2.5-4.1GB

Video quality

1440p (QHD)

Resolution (pixels)

2560×1440

Frame rate (FPS)

30-60

Bit rate (average)

6.0-18.0Mbps

Data used per minute

45-135MB

Data used per 60 minutes

2.7-8.1GB

Video quality

2160p (4k) (UHD)

Resolution (pixels)

3840×2160

Frame rate (FPS)

30-60

Bit rate (average)

13.0-51.0Mbps

Data used per minute

95-385MB

Data used per 60 minutes

5.5-23.0GB

Video quality

4320p (8k) (FUHD)

Resolution (pixels)

7680×4320

Frame rate (FPS)

30-60

Bit rate (average)

20-50 Mbps (estimated @30FPS)

Data used per minute

150-375MB (estimated at 30FPS)

Data used per 60 minutes

9.0-22.5 GB (estimated @30FPS)

We want to clarify the data a bit. YouTube uses a variable bitrate. So the amount of data you use should fall somewhere between the high and low numbers we posted above. We understand that the difference between low and high can vary significantly at higher resolutions, but a 4K video uses much less data at a lower bitrate and 30FPS than at 60FPS and a higher bitrate. We are quite confident that your total data usage will fall within the applicable ranges listed above.


How to reduce data usage on YouTube

YouTube data saver 1

Joe Hindy / Android Authority

It is quite easy to save data to YouTube. For starters, the app and website let you choose your resolution. You can easily set it to a manageable resolution. In addition, the YouTube app on mobile has a data saver feature that hard-locks videos down to around 480p and looks pretty good on most smartphone screens.

You can access this by opening the YouTube app, clicking your profile picture, and then clicking . to tap Settings. From there, tap the Saving data option and enable it. It reduces the video quality, so you use less data.

You can also access data saving mode while watching a YouTube video. Press the cogwheel button, tap the Quality option, and choose the Data Saving option there.

There are other ways to do it. We recommend being on Wi-Fi as often as possible so you don’t use a ton of mobile data. It used to be that you needed a third-party data saver app to limit usage even more. However, YouTube has built a data saver feature right into the app, so a third-party app can’t do anything that the main YouTube app can.


Some additional notes

YouTube data usage 4K

Joe Hindy / Android Authority

Our first fun observation is how YouTube loads videos. It does not use a continuous flow. Instead, it loads data in chunks while pre-buffering the video as you watch. It does this quite often. This also skews the numbers a bit. For example, let’s say you’re only watching one minute of a four-minute video. YouTube probably loaded an extra 30-45 seconds in advance.

That means you’ve loaded about one minute and 45 seconds of video, even if you only watched it for one minute. We have not corrected our data for this behavior as it is beyond our control. That’s just how YouTube uses data. We zoomed in on a portion of GlassWire’s graph as we measured the 4K video stream and you can clearly see the heavy load at the beginning and the chunk loading later on.

YouTube data usage 144p vs 4K

Joe Hindy / Android Authority

144p vs 4K test. The 144p test are the small bumps on the left, while the 4K test are the huge bumps on the right.

Second, the difference between a 4K video and a 144p video is really huge. We’ve added the screenshot above so you can see it for yourself. The 144p test is the small bumps on the left and the 4K test is the massive amount of use on the right. Since the data is squashed together to show two separate tests, you can’t really see the chunk loading. However, what you can see is the huge difference in data usage and how much more intense it is on your data connection.


FAQ

In our tests, live-streamed data uses roughly the same amount of data as a comparably long YouTube video at the same resolution and frame rate.

Open the YouTube app, click your profile picture, then tap the Time viewed choice. Here you can see how much YouTube you’ve watched in the past week. The option below, Your data on YouTube shows your watch history, comment history, playlist history, etc. Plus, every tool we used to measure YouTube data is available to you for free. Scroll up to our download link testing methods section.

There are two possible causes for this. The first is that your YouTube app settings ensure that each video is played at the maximum resolution and bitrate. Second, you might watch a lot of YouTube videos. It adds up faster than you might think. Try adjusting your app settings according to YouTube’s data saving

Have you ever tried to measure your YouTube data rates? If yes, tell us your results in the comments.