Google gains 25M subscriptions in Q1, driven by YouTube and Google One

TechCrunch / 4/30/2026

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Key Points

  • Alphabet reported a net gain of 25 million paid subscriptions in Q1, bringing Google to 350 million paid subscriptions across its services.
  • YouTube and Google One were cited as the main drivers of subscription growth, with Google bundling access to advanced Gemini features into Google One plans.
  • The company did not provide specific Gemini subscriber or monthly active user figures, though it referenced ongoing Gemini growth and said paid monthly active users in key enterprise markets rose 40% quarter over quarter.
  • YouTube ad revenue grew year over year but fell short of Wall Street expectations, raising investor concerns as Google promotes ad-free viewing through YouTube Premium.
  • Overall, the update highlights steady subscription momentum alongside ad-revenue pressure from the shift toward ad-free video subscriptions.

Google has added another 25 million paid subscriptions to its services over the past quarter, parent company Alphabet announced during its first-quarter earnings report on Wednesday. The company said it now has 350 million paid subscriptions across its services, up from 325 million in Q4 2025, with YouTube and Google One — its cloud storage and subscription service — plans driving the recent growth.

The earnings report didn’t highlight the number of Gemini subscribers or its monthly active users. But access to advanced Gemini features is now bundled in with those Google One plans, which are growing.

The lack of solid numbers may suggest that the Gemini chatbot still has more than 750 million users, the same benchmark reported in the prior quarter. Google pointed to the growth of Gemini in the key enterprise market, noting a 40% quarter-over-quarter increase in paid monthly active users. It did not offer a solid number here, either.

YouTube ad revenue missed Wall Street expectations, even as it continued to grow year over year.

As Google pushes ad-free viewing as part of its YouTube Premium subscription plan, the video service has seen a decline in ad revenue that has worried investors. Per CNBC, Wall Street expected Alphabet to bring in $9.99 billion in YouTube ad revenue this quarter, but it pulled in $9.88 billion. Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai had warned analysts last quarter that investors should evaluate YouTube’s business going forward based on a combination of ads and subscriptions: When users switch to a YouTube subscription plan, it has a negative impact on ad revenue.

Last year, YouTube’s annual revenue topped $60 billion across both ads and subscriptions, with Q4 2025 bringing in $11.4 billion in YouTube ads alone. This quarter, the YouTube ads figure was $9.9 billion. That’s up 11% year-over-year, the company pointed out, but a shortfall on analyst expectations suggests that consumers are continuing to move from ad-supported YouTube viewing to ad-free subscriptions through YouTube Premium. We expect to hear more about this on the company’s earnings call.

Either way, Alphabet’s stock is up after surpassing Wall Street’s expectations, with revenue of $109.9 billion, which included healthy cloud growth. Cloud revenue alone topped $20 billion.

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