Apple brings HLS video to Apple Podcasts — ad market opens
Apple is adding HLS-based video podcast support to Apple Podcasts, allowing users to watch or listen interchangeably, download for offline viewing, and benefit from adaptive streaming quality across devices and the web. Creators will be able to distribute HLS video via participating hosting providers and ad networks, retain control over content and monetization, and insert dynamic video ads, while Apple plans to charge ad networks an impression-based fee for video ad delivery later this year. The feature enters beta in iOS, iPadOS, and visionOS 26.4 now and will roll out broadly this spring across iPhone, iPad, Apple Vision Pro, and the web.
Key Takeaways
- Apple Podcasts now supports HLS video: adaptive streaming, offline downloads, and seamless watch/listen switching across devices and web.
- Creators retain distribution and monetization control via participating hosts; dynamic video ad insertion is supported without disrupting existing feeds.
- Launch partners include Acast, ART19 (Amazon), Triton/Omny Studio and SiriusXM Media (AdsWizz, Simplecast); more hosts to follow.
- Apple won’t charge hosts/creators to distribute HLS video but will levy an impression-based fee on participating ad networks later this year — centralizing delivery while opening video ad inventory.
Why It Matters
This turns podcasting into a first‑class video medium and hands creators access to the broader video ad market without forcing them onto a closed Apple paywall. HLS delivers the technical plumbing publishers need—adaptive bitrate, downloads, cross‑platform playback—while dynamic ad slots create new revenue lines. The tradeoff: Apple controls delivery and will start collecting ad-impression fees, positioning itself as the gatekeeper for video podcast ad delivery. For streaming strategists and ad-tech investors, expect reallocated ad spend, new measurement demands, and a sprint by hosts and platforms to build video-native shows and capture premium CPMs.
Read full article at apple.com