Is Downloading YouTube Videos Legal? A Plain-English Guide
24 فبراير 2026
This question gets asked constantly, and most answers online are either "totally illegal!" or "totally fine!" — both wrong. The real answer separates two things people usually lump together: the tool, and what you do with it.
Terms of Service vs. copyright law — two different things
YouTube's Terms of Service say you shouldn't download videos except through their own offline feature. That's a contract between you and YouTube — breaking it can get your account limited or banned, but it is not, by itself, a criminal or civil legal violation. It's the same category as violating a store's "no outside food" policy: enforceable by the store, not by police.
Copyright law is separate and is what actually matters legally. Copyright infringement means copying and using someone else's protected work without permission or a valid exception — and that's true whether you used a downloader, a screen recorder, or literally anything else. The tool used to make the copy is irrelevant to whether the copying was infringing.
What's safe to download
- Your own uploads — obviously fine, it's your content.
- Creative Commons-licensed videos — the license explicitly permits reuse under its terms.
- Public domain content — no copyright applies.
- Content the creator explicitly says you may download (many educational channels do).
What's not safe
Downloading a copyrighted movie, TV episode, music video, or someone else's monetized content without permission and then redistributing it, uploading it elsewhere, or using it commercially is infringement — the same as it would be if you'd copied it any other way. Downloading a copy purely for private, personal viewing sits in a much greyer, less-enforced area in most jurisdictions, but "grey and rarely enforced" is not the same as "definitely legal," and laws vary meaningfully by country.
What about DRM?
In the US, the DMCA specifically bans circumventing digital rights management (DRM) — the encryption Netflix, Spotify, etc. use to lock content. YouTube's videos aren't DRM-protected the way a streaming service's catalog is; the barrier is server-side delivery logic, not encryption you'd need to crack. That's a meaningful legal distinction, and it's why tools like yt-dlp (which Puliqo is built on) have survived legal challenges aimed at them, while DRM-stripping tools are treated very differently.
The practical takeaway
Download what you have the right to keep. If you're not sure whether you have that right, that uncertainty is itself the answer — don't. Puliqo's own legal notice on every page exists for exactly this reason: the tool is neutral, what you do with it isn't.
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