The standoff between Disney and YouTube TV has intensified as both companies fail to reach a new deal over carriage fees — leaving millions of YouTube TV users without access to major Disney-owned channels including ESPN, ABC, FX, and National Geographic.
Disney says it offered YouTube TV a new agreement that would actually reduce overall costs while allowing more flexible channel bundles. YouTube TV disputes that claim, insisting that Disney’s latest proposal demands above-market pricing and would force subscriber price hikes.
The blackout began on October 30, 2025, affecting over 20 Disney networks across the platform. Analysts estimate that Disney is losing roughly $30 million per week, while YouTube TV is offering users a $20 credit during the dispute.
What’s Really at Stake
This conflict reflects a growing battle across the streaming industry — between content owners like Disney who want higher revenue for premium rights, and distributors like YouTube TV trying to keep subscription costs stable.
With live sports (especially ESPN) at the center of the fight, the outcome could reshape how consumers pay for live content in the U.S. and beyond.
“Our goal is to keep prices fair for subscribers,” YouTube TV said.
“We’ve made a reasonable offer,” Disney countered, urging YouTube TV to “value the content fans love.”
Key Facts
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Channels affected: ESPN, ABC, FX, Freeform, National Geographic and others
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Start of blackout: October 30, 2025
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Losses: Disney losing $30 million/week (Morgan Stanley)
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Customer compensation: YouTube TV offering $20 bill credit
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Industry impact: Tensions rising as streaming costs continue to climb
Why It Matters
The dispute shows how fragile the “cord-cutting” ecosystem has become. While consumers turned to streaming to escape cable price wars, similar fights over licensing fees are now pushing prices back up — creating what analysts call “the second streaming bubble.”
