Create shareable YouTube links that start playback at a specific time. Supports watch URLs, short links, and embed codes.
Enter a URL then set the timestamp below
Timestamp links add a ?t= start time so long tutorials, meetings, or reviews open on the right beat — no manual scrubbing. They also make chapter notes, support tickets, and classroom follow-ups easier because everyone lands on the same frame.
Enter hours, minutes, and seconds; we convert to seconds (e.g. ?t=90 for 1:30) and give watch, short, and embed variants you can paste anywhere. Copy the version that matches how your team shares links in email, Slack, or documentation.
Pick the shape that fits Slack, Notion, email, or your CMS — each option keeps the same underlying start time.
Build a watch URL with a t=seconds parameter so teammates or subscribers land exactly on the beat you referenced instead of scrubbing through the intro again.
Short links stay tidy in Slack threads and email footers while still carrying the same start offset once the YouTube player opens on desktop or mobile.
The embed variant uses the start= parameter so your iframe begins on the right frame for tutorials, lecture notes, or embedded help without extra JavaScript.
Every format stays synchronized with your hours, minutes, and seconds fields, so you can copy whichever shape your CMS, doc, or automation script expects next.
Enter any YouTube video URL.
Enter hours, minutes, and seconds for where you want playback to start.
Copy the timestamped URL in your preferred format.
Link directly to the most relevant moment in a long video.
Share specific steps in how-to videos without making viewers scrub through.
Reference exact moments when writing video reviews or analysis articles.
Drop timestamped links in YouTube comments to guide viewers to key moments.
Paste a watch or short URL with the exact start time into Slack, Notion, or tickets so everyone lands on the same frame.
Give students a single link per segment so modules stay short and you can update the source video without rewriting IDs.