Pull a clean snapshot of any public video—thumbnail, title, channel name, Channel ID, views, likes, comments, dates, duration, and full description. No login.
Supports: youtube.com/watch?v=… · youtu.be/… · video ID
This page reads public metadata from the YouTube Data API and lays it out like a briefing: thumbnail, title, creator name, official Channel ID (with copy), publish date, duration, views, likes, comments, and the full description (also copyable). You never sign in and you do not need your own API key.
Counts are subject to YouTube's normal API caching—often within a few hours of what you see in Studio. Use it for quick competitor checks, sponsor vetting, or grabbing the description and Channel ID for a spreadsheet, brief, or downstream tool.
Four highlights line up with the on-page layout—identity first, then engagement, timing, and the full write-up.
Gray header strip with the video thumbnail, title, and channel display name so you instantly know what you opened.
Public view, like, and comment totals as returned by the API—handy for benchmarking or a quick pulse check before a collab.
Localised publish date plus runtime parsed from YouTube's ISO 8601 duration—useful for scheduling comps and playlist math.
Official Channel ID with a one-tap copy button, plus the entire description in a scrollable panel with its own copy—ideal for CRMs, decks, or repurposing workflows.
Drop in a watch link, Shorts URL, youtu.be short link, or the raw 11-character video ID.
We call the YouTube API in the background; most lookups finish in about a second.
Scan the snapshot, then use Copy beside Channel ID or Description when you need clean text elsewhere.
Compare views, likes, and comments across rival uploads without opening Studio or juggling exports.
Validate reach and read the real description before you sign a sponsor or guest spot.
Copy Channel ID and description straight into a sheet, brief, or partner record—no manual retyping.
Skim titles, descriptions, and engagement on several URLs in a row to spot patterns in wording or performance.
Note views and engagement shortly after publish, then revisit the same page later to see momentum.
Comment totals alongside likes give a fast read on whether a video sparked conversation or passive views.