Pre-watching is not a system
Parents screening every video by hand can't scale past one busy week. FilteredTube's kids mode flips the burden: the catalog itself narrows to kids-approved content — home, search, and up-next all obey, not just the front shelf.
Time limits that actually limit
Set a daily cap in minutes. When it's reached, the player locks and asks for the parent PIN — the discussion is over before it starts. The cap resets each day, honestly.
Their own little accounts
On a family plan every child gets their own account: their favorites, their series progress, their limits. $9.99 for three accounts, $14.99 for six.
The kids catalog grows the same way everything here grows — through review, never through upload. Songs, stories, and kid-level Torah enter only after clearing the same written standard, tagged for children specifically, so kids mode has a real shelf to stand on. Parents who want something added can request it and watch the answer land. Between the locked catalog, the daily cap, and the PIN, the screen finally behaves like a member of the household — one that keeps the family's rules even when nobody is watching the watcher.
At a glance
Key takeaways
- Kids mode narrows EVERYTHING — home, search, and up-next.
- Daily caps end with a lock and a parent PIN, not a nag.
- Family plans give each child a separate account and history.
Continue with FilteredTube
Explore the focused player.
Search Torah and Jewish music inside the reviewed FilteredTube experience, or read how official embeds and licensed media remain separate.