Vision Pro YouTube app arrives: 730-day gap ends with full spatial video support

GigaNectar Team

Apple Vision Pro headset user viewing multiple floating application windows in spatial computing environment showing productivity workspace with infinite digital canvas

When Apple launched the Vision Pro on February 2, 2024, at $3,499, users expected the world’s largest video platform to be available as a native app. Instead, YouTube was absent from the spatial computing headset, forcing users to access content through Safari’s web browser. The workaround stripped away immersive features like 3D, 360-degree, and VR180 video support that the Vision Pro hardware was built to deliver.

Google initially stated it had no plans for a Vision Pro app, but reversed course within days after user backlash. On February 5, 2024, YouTube spokesperson Jessica Gibby confirmed to The Verge that “a Vision Pro app is on our roadmap,” though no timeline was provided. What followed was a two-year wait punctuated by third-party solutions, takedown requests, and growing frustration from the Vision Pro community.

On February 12, 2026, Google finally released the official YouTube app for visionOS. The app delivers every video format YouTube offers—standard videos, Shorts, 3D content, 360-degree experiences, and VR180 immersive videos—with full account integration and a spatial interface designed specifically for Apple’s headset. The launch addresses major gaps in Vision Pro’s content ecosystem and provides users with the native YouTube experience they requested since day one.

The Two-Year Wait for YouTube on Vision Pro

From browser workarounds to native spatial computing excellence

2
Years of Development
100%
All YouTube Content Supported
360°
Immersive Video Formats

Journey from Launch to Official App

Track the complete development timeline from Vision Pro’s debut to YouTube’s native app arrival

February 2, 2024
Vision Pro Launches Without YouTube
Apple’s $3,499 mixed reality headset arrives in stores without a native YouTube app. Users express frustration at the absence of the world’s largest video platform on a device built for video content consumption. YouTube directs users to Safari’s web interface, which works for 2D videos but lacks spatial features.
February 5, 2024
YouTube Adds App to Roadmap
Just three days after launch, YouTube changes its stance. Spokesperson Jessica Gibby confirms to The Verge that “a Vision Pro app is on our roadmap,” though no specific timeline is provided. The announcement offers hope but no concrete delivery date.
February – June 2024
Third-Party Solutions Emerge
Developer Christian Selig launches Juno, an unofficial YouTube client for Vision Pro. The app gains popularity by offering features like immersive 360-degree video playback and AI upscaling to 6K resolution. Juno becomes the go-to solution for Vision Pro owners seeking a proper YouTube experience beyond browser limitations.
October 1, 2024
Juno Removed from App Store
YouTube files a complaint with Apple, claiming Juno violates API guidelines and trademark policies. Selig complies with the removal request, choosing not to fight Google after his experience with Apollo for Reddit in 2023. Vision Pro users are left with only the Safari web interface for YouTube access for several more months.
February 12, 2026
Official YouTube App Launches
Google releases the native visionOS YouTube app with comprehensive feature support. Apple spokesperson Corey Nord confirms the app includes standard videos, Shorts, 3D content, 360-degree videos, and VR180 formats. Full account integration provides watch history, subscriptions, and personalized recommendations. The two-year development period concludes with a proper spatial computing experience.

Native visionOS Features

The official app brings full YouTube functionality designed specifically for spatial computing

📺

Complete Video Library

Access every video on YouTube natively, including standard rectangular videos and vertical Shorts with a specialized spatial interface optimized for Vision Pro’s display system.

🥽

3D Video Playback

Watch stereoscopic 3D content with true depth perception, utilizing Vision Pro’s dual micro-OLED displays that deliver 23 million pixels combined for each eye.

🌐

360-Degree Experiences

Full 360-degree video support lets users look around immersive environments naturally, placing them at the center of travel videos, concerts, and experiential content.

🎬

VR180 Format Support

VR180 videos deliver stereoscopic depth in a 180-degree field of view, creating the immersive experiences that justify wearing a spatial computing headset.

👤

Full Account Integration

Complete signed-in experience with watch history, subscriptions, playlists, and personalized recommendations synchronized across all your devices seamlessly.

📱

Spatial Interface Design

Panels arranged spatially in front of users with native visionOS controls—not just an iPad app port—designed specifically for Vision Pro’s unique interaction model using eyes, hands, and voice.

The YouTube Experience Transformed

How the official app changes everything for Vision Pro users

BEFORE (2024-2026)
  • No native YouTube app available
  • Browser workaround via Safari only
  • Limited to basic 2D video playback
  • No 3D, 360°, or VR180 support
  • Missing spatial computing features
  • Third-party apps removed by Google
  • Non-optimized interface design
  • Limited watch history synchronization
AFTER (February 2026)
  • Official native visionOS application
  • Dedicated spatial user interface
  • Full standard video library access
  • Complete 3D video support
  • 360-degree immersive content
  • VR180 format compatibility
  • Full signed-in experience with sync
  • Specialized Shorts viewing interface

The official YouTube app for Vision Pro was released on February 12, 2026, exactly two years and ten days after the headset’s launch. The app includes support for all YouTube video formats, from standard content to immersive VR180 experiences, with a spatial interface built specifically for visionOS.

During the two-year development period, Vision Pro users relied on Safari’s web browser for YouTube access. Third-party developer Christian Selig created Juno, an unofficial YouTube client that offered immersive video playback and AI upscaling features. Google requested the app’s removal from the App Store in October 2024, citing API policy concerns and trademark issues, leaving users with only the browser option until the official app’s arrival.

The YouTube app’s launch fills a content gap that existed since Vision Pro’s debut. Users can now access YouTube’s library with full account integration, including watch history, subscriptions, and personalized recommendations. The app provides the native spatial computing features that Vision Pro hardware was designed to deliver. The extended timeline from roadmap announcement to app release was discussed in relation to platform development challenges facing new hardware ecosystems.

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