YouTube Direct Messages return to mobile app with video sharing and 18+ access

YouTube Direct Messages return to mobile app for users 18+, allowing video sharing, private chats and safer in-app conversations.

YouTube Direct Messages are returning to the mobile app, giving users a built-in way to share videos, Shorts and live streams without switching to WhatsApp, Instagram or Discord, as noted by customreceipt.com.

YouTube Messages are back in selected regions

YouTube says the feature is expanding to users aged 18 and older in the U.S. and other global locations. It is not available to every account yet.

The new system is focused on video sharing first. Users can open the app, tap the messaging icon, send an invite and start a conversation after it is accepted.

This makes the update useful for viewers, creators and small communities around channels.

What users can do inside YouTube

The feature brings private conversation closer to the content itself.

Users can:

  • send video links inside YouTube;
  • react and discuss content in real time;
  • invite contacts through another messaging app;
  • continue conversations without leaving the mobile app.

After the invite is accepted, both users can exchange content and messages directly on YouTube. Invite links remain limited, which reduces random contact and spam risk.

FeatureCurrent status
Private messagesrolling out
Age access18+
Main usesharing videos
Availabilityselected countries
ModerationCommunity Guidelines apply

The system is designed as a controlled return, not a full social network inside YouTube. That distinction matters for privacy and safety.

Why YouTube removed chats in 2019

YouTube shut down its earlier private messaging feature in 2019. The company later focused on public comments, creator tools and safer sharing options.

The new version has stricter limits. Messages may be reviewed for safety, and YouTube says shared content must follow its Community Guidelines.

What happens next

The rollout will likely continue in phases. YouTube is collecting feedback before wider expansion.

For creators, YouTube messaging could increase watch time and make video sharing more direct. For users, the main benefit is simpler: fewer app switches and faster conversations around content.

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