Block YouTube Shorts on iPhone
Keep useful YouTube.
Stop the Shorts loop.
Start with YouTube's own Shorts Feed limit. If a dismissible reminder is not enough, decide whether blocking the entire YouTube app is worth the tradeoff.
Yes, YouTube now includes a Shorts-specific control. You can set the Shorts Feed limit to zero without blocking subscriptions, search, long videos, tutorials, or uploads. That is the best first step for most people.
The limitation matters: for a standard account, the limit displays a reminder and offers an option to dismiss or ignore it. If you repeatedly override that reminder, iPhone Screen Time or Fella can add a broader boundary—but both restrict the whole YouTube app rather than only Shorts.
Shorts live inside YouTube, not as a separate iPhone app. No honest whole-app blocker should promise to distinguish one YouTube tab from another.
Set YouTube's Shorts Feed limit to zero
1. Open YouTube and sign in. Make sure the app is current if the setting does not appear.
2. Tap You, then Settings. Open Time management and choose Shorts Feed limit.
3. Select zero. YouTube also offers other time limits if complete removal feels too abrupt.
4. Treat the prompt as a stop sign. When the reminder appears, leave rather than using the dismiss option. The control is useful only if you do not turn ignoring it into the new habit.
This is the only option here designed specifically for Shorts. It preserves long-form YouTube access and should come before an app-wide block.
Compare the stronger options
| Method | What it blocks | Best fit |
|---|---|---|
| YouTube Shorts Feed limit | Shows a reminder in the Shorts feed; can be set to zero. | Keep long videos and other YouTube features. |
| Screen Time App Limit | The entire YouTube app after its daily allowance. | Permit measured YouTube use of any kind. |
| Screen Time Downtime | The entire app during scheduled hours. | Keep YouTube out of mornings, work, or bedtime. |
| Fella | The entire YouTube app all day. | One emergency 5-minute window is enough. |
For Apple's options, go to Settings > Screen Time > App & Website Activity. Choose App Limits for daily minutes or Downtime for a schedule. Remember that YouTube Music is a separate app; select only what you intend to restrict.
When to block the whole YouTube app with Fella
Choose Fella only when the tradeoff makes sense. Add YouTube if Shorts are the main problem and useful YouTube viewing can move to a computer, television, or intentional browser session.
Selected apps stay blocked all day. Fella does not run a YouTube schedule or count minutes. The iPhone app is unavailable by default.
One emergency 5-minute unlock remains. Use it to retrieve a saved tutorial, share a link, or handle a creator task. YouTube relocks automatically when the window ends.
Do not use Fella if long-form mobile YouTube is essential throughout the day. The Shorts-specific YouTube control is a much more precise fit in that case.
Prevent Shorts from moving to another screen
Remove direct triggers. Turn off YouTube notifications, remove the widget, and stop opening Shorts links from social apps when you did not intend to watch video.
Use a destination for intentional viewing. Put tutorials and longer videos into Watch Later, then watch them on a computer or TV where vertical swiping is less convenient.
Account for Safari. Fella blocks the YouTube iPhone app, not youtube.com. If the habit simply moves to the browser, use a separate website restriction or keep browser viewing to a defined location.
Notice substitution. Blocking Shorts can push the same loop to Reels, TikTok, or another short-video feed. The useful blocked list targets the behavior across apps, not only the first logo.
Blocking YouTube Shorts FAQ
YouTube now offers a Shorts Feed limit, including zero, under You > Settings > Time management. On a regular account it is a reminder that can be dismissed; iPhone-level blockers generally restrict the whole YouTube app.
In the YouTube app, open You > Settings > Time management > Shorts Feed limit, then choose zero. Availability can depend on the current app version and account.
No. Fella blocks the entire YouTube iPhone app, not the Shorts tab. Use YouTube's own Shorts Feed limit when long-form mobile viewing must stay available.
No. An iPhone app block does not delete your YouTube account, subscriptions, playlists, uploads, or history.
No. Fella blocks selected iPhone apps, not websites. Safari and computer access require a separate boundary.
See the full guide to blocking YouTube, learn how to block Instagram Reels, or address the wider loop with the social media app blocker guide and doomscrolling guide.
