Surface the videos rising right now in any topic — title, thumbnail, channel, and date in one scrollable grid.
Use words or short phrases — not channel links or watch URLs. Minimum 2 characters.
YouTube Trending Videos takes a topic — like ai workflows or k-pop dance — and surfaces the videos catching momentum right now. Each card shows the title, thumbnail, channel, and recent publish date so you can spot heat without scrubbing the homepage.
Use it to time your next upload: when fresh videos in a topic are racking up views fast, that's a wave you can ride. When the page feels stale, the trend is cooling and your effort is better spent elsewhere. Treat the grid as a quick momentum check before you greenlight a script.
Built for creators who want to read the room before filming — and avoid spending a week on a topic that already peaked.
Each card is a real video YouTube is surfacing for your topic right now, not a static "best of" list curated weeks ago.
Publish dates make it obvious which videos are days old vs months old, so you know which wave is still cresting.
Compare hooks, faces, colors, and copy across trending results — pattern recognition is faster here than scrolling YouTube's feed.
Click any card to open the video on YouTube in a new tab, then study its comments, tags, and audience reactions.
Type a niche, theme, or short phrase — the way you'd describe the kind of videos you'd open if you were scrolling YouTube.
Scan the grid for fresh dates and bold titles; when many recent videos cluster around the same hook, that's the wave.
Pick the angle that's under-served — same trend, sharper hook — and ship before the topic cools off.
Drop in a topic, see what's rising, and post your version while the audience is still hungry for it.
When a moment, controversy, or release is breaking, find the videos other creators are already publishing about it.
Stay current in your category without doomscrolling — one search shows you the live frontier of any niche.
Validate that a TikTok or Reels trend is also picking up on YouTube before you cut a longer-form version.
New channels can ride a hot topic to early reach instead of chasing evergreen keywords full of established competitors.
Decide which planned series to release next based on which themes are heating up this week.