YouTube TV is consistently one of the most popular cable replacements I help people switch to in the northwest Twin Cities. It's not perfect, but for the right household it genuinely replaces cable at a lower cost — with less hassle. Here's a clear-eyed look at whether it makes sense for you.
What Is YouTube TV?
YouTube TV is a live TV streaming service from Google. It works over your internet connection — no cable box, no satellite dish. You watch it on your TV through a Roku, Fire Stick, smart TV app, or any device with a screen. You get live channels just like cable, plus unlimited cloud DVR storage, and the ability to watch on multiple screens at once.
It has nothing to do with regular YouTube (the free video site). Same company, completely different product.
What Channels Do You Get in Minnesota?
YouTube TV's base package includes the channels most Minnesota households actually watch:
- Local news: KARE 11 (NBC), WCCO (CBS), KSTP (ABC), Fox 9 — all available via YouTube TV in the Twin Cities market
- Sports: ESPN, ESPN2, FS1, FS2, Big Ten Network, Golf Channel, NBCSN
- News: CNN, Fox News, MSNBC, HLN
- Entertainment: USA, TNT, TBS, Bravo, HGTV, Food Network, Discovery, History, A&E, Lifetime, Hallmark
- Kids: Disney Channel, Disney Junior, Cartoon Network, Nick Jr.
Minnesota-specific note: Local channel availability can vary by zip code. The Twin Cities market has excellent local channel coverage on YouTube TV, but I'd always recommend verifying your specific address at tv.youtube.com before subscribing.
What's Missing?
YouTube TV doesn't carry everything. Notable gaps:
- NFL Network and NFL RedZone (available as an add-on)
- MLB Network (not included)
- Some regional Bally Sports channels — this is a significant issue for Twins, Wild, and Timberwolves fans (see below)
- Certain premium cable channels like HBO/Max — those are separate subscriptions
The Bally Sports Problem
This is the big one for Minnesota sports fans. Bally Sports North (formerly Fox Sports North) carries Twins, Wild, and Timberwolves games — and it's not available on YouTube TV. It's also been in financial trouble as a network, so its future is uncertain regardless of which service you use. If local professional sports games are essential, you'll need a workaround — a separate Bally Sports app subscription, or an antenna for games that air on over-the-air channels.
What Does It Cost?
| Service | Monthly Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| YouTube TV Base | ~$72.99/mo | 100+ channels, unlimited DVR |
| NFL Sunday Ticket add-on | ~$9/mo (season) | Out-of-market NFL games |
| 4K Plus add-on | ~$9.99/mo | 4K content, unlimited streams at home |
| Typical Comcast cable | $100–$160/mo | After intro period expires |
The comparison math usually shows YouTube TV saving $30–$80/month over a current cable bill — more if your cable bill has crept up over the years with fees. That's real money over 12 months.
The DVR Is Actually Better Than Cable's
One of the most pleasant surprises for people who switch: YouTube TV's DVR is genuinely better than most cable DVRs. You get unlimited storage, recorded shows are kept for 9 months, you can skip commercials on most recorded content, and your recordings are available everywhere — not just in your living room.
No more setting up manual series recordings or losing a season finale because your DVR ran out of space.
What Do You Need to Make It Work?
- A reliable internet connection — at least 25 Mbps, though 50+ is better if multiple people are watching at once
- A streaming device on each TV (Roku, Fire Stick, or a smart TV with the YouTube TV app built in)
- A Google account to sign up
If you're switching from cable and you've never set up a streaming device, that's where the learning curve is — not with YouTube TV itself, which is quite easy to navigate once you're in. Getting the device set up and configured on each TV is usually the part worth getting help with.
The Bottom Line
YouTube TV is worth it if you're paying over $100/month for cable and primarily watch the major broadcast networks, cable news, sports, and HGTV-type channels. It's not worth it if Bally Sports is essential to your household or if your internet connection is unreliable.
Most households in Maple Grove, Plymouth, and Champlin that I've helped switch over have been happy with the change after a couple of weeks of adjustment. The adjustment period is real — but it's short.
Ready to Cut the Cable But Not Sure Where to Start?
I come to your home, review your current bill, help you decide if streaming makes sense, and set up YouTube TV (or another service) on every TV in your house — so you leave the appointment knowing exactly how everything works.
Call or text: (763) 250-1227 · Mon–Fri 9am–4pm · Sat 9am–1pm