Invidious vs Jellyfin

TaglinePrivacy-respecting alternative front-end for YouTubeFree open-source media server — a self-hosted Plex alternative
CategoryMedia Servers & StreamingMedia Servers & Streaming
ReplacesNetflixPlex, Netflix
GitHub stars20k53k
LanguageDockerC#
LicenseAGPL-3.0GPL-2.0
Self-host difficulty
3/5
Moderate
2/5
Easy
Deploy options
Docker
Docker Compose
Manual
Docker
Docker Compose
Manual
Managed hosting
Last updated3 days agoyesterday
View repoView repo

Where each falls short

The honest trade-offs — what you give up with each, versus the proprietary tools they replace.

Invidious
  • Relies entirely on YouTube's infrastructure; Google can and does throttle or break the API at any time.
  • No support for YouTube Shorts, YouTube Music, or YouTube Premium content.
  • Comment loading and search quality degrade as Google tightens API restrictions.
  • No upload capability; purely a viewing front-end.
Jellyfin
  • No official cloud/managed hosting option; you must run and maintain your own server.
  • Hardware transcoding setup can be complex, requiring manual GPU passthrough configuration.
  • Plugin ecosystem is smaller and less polished than Plex's mature marketplace.
  • Lacks Plex's global CDN-backed streaming relay for remote access without port forwarding.

Bottom line

Choose Jellyfin if you want the lower-effort setup; choose Jellyfin for the larger community and ecosystem. Jellyfin has seen more recent development. Open each guide below for deploy steps and the full feature gap.

Invidious

Privacy-respecting alternative front-end for YouTube

Jellyfin

Free open-source media server — a self-hosted Plex alternative