Links that send users to content that violates our Community Guidelines are not allowed on YouTube. If you find content that violates this policy, report it. Note: Certain links may not be clickable. Learn more here.
What this policy means for you
If you're posting content
Don't post links in your content on YouTube if they direct users to content that violates our Community Guidelines. This policy includes links that fit any of the descriptions noted below. Please note that this is not a complete list.
- Links to pornography
- Links to websites or apps that install malware
- Links to websites or apps phishing for a user's sign-in info, financial info, etc.
- Links to websites, apps or other sources that give unauthorised access to audio content, audiovisual content, video games, software or streaming services that normally require payment
- Links to websites that seek to raise funds or recruit for terrorist organisations
- Links to sites containing child sexual abuse imagery (CSAI)
- Links to sites selling items noted in our regulated goods guidelines
- Links to content that would violate our hate or harassment policies
- Links to content encouraging others to commit violent acts
- Links to content that spreads medical misinformation contradicting local health authorities' (LHA) or the World Health Organization's (WHO) medical info about COVID-19
- Links to websites or apps that spread misleading or deceptive content that can cause serious risk of egregious harm, such as interfering with democratic processes
- Links to external sites that contain manifestos of violent attackers
This policy applies to video, audio, channel, comments, pinned comments, live streams and any other YouTube product or feature. Links can take any form that would direct a user to a site off YouTube. These links include: clickable URLs, showing the text of URLs in videos or images and obfuscated URLs (such as writing 'dot com' instead of '.com'). These links can also include verbally directing users to other sites, encouraging viewers to visit creator profiles or pages on other sites or promising violative content on other sites. This list is not complete.
Note: Affiliate content doesn't violate YouTube's Terms of Use. Excessively posting affiliate content in dedicated accounts may violate our policies around spam. You can learn more about what's allowed in our spam, deceptive practices and scams policies.
Examples
Here are some examples of content that's not allowed on YouTube.
- A video featuring sexually themed content whose description says 'click to see what YouTube won't allow!' and contains a link to a pornographic site.
- A gameplay video description contains a link promising in-game currency or online store credit but links to a site that infects the user's computer with malware.
- Posting a link to a phishing site that steals users' banking info and passwords.
- Instructing viewers to copy and paste an unclickable link in the video that takes them to a pornographic or spammy site.
- Any link leading users to a website, file hosting service or other source that allows them to access or download child sexual abuse imagery.
- Verbally directing viewers to a website to find a profile or page on another platform so that they can watch content that violates YouTube's Community Guidelines.
- Embedding a URL in a video of a site that would mislead voters about the time, place, means or eligibility requirements for voting.
- A link to an article claiming that COVID-19 vaccines are part of a depopulation agenda.
Remember that this list is not complete. If you think content might violate this policy, don't post it.
What happens if content violates this policy
If your content violates this policy, we will remove the content and send you an email to let you know. If we can't verify that a link that you post is safe, we may remove the link. Note that violative URLs posted within the video itself or in the video's metadata may result in the video being removed.
If this is the first time that you've violated our community guidelines, you'll most likely get a warning with no penalty to your channel. You will have the chance to take policy training to allow the warning to expire after 90 days. The 90-day period starts from when the training is completed, not when the warning is issued. However, if the same policy is violated within that 90-day window, the warning will not expire and your channel will be given a strike. If you violate a different policy after completing the training, you will get another warning.
If you get three strikes within 90 days, your channel will be terminated. Learn more about our strikes system.
We may terminate your channel or account for repeated violations of the Community Guidelines or Terms of Service. We may also terminate your channel or account after a single case of severe abuse or when the channel is dedicated to a policy violation. We may prevent repeat offenders from taking policy training in the future. Learn more about channel or account terminations.