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YouTube Keyword Tool

Pull hundreds of real YouTube search phrases for any topic — the queries people type into the world’s second-largest search engine.

Free · no signup · real data — provided by Keywords Everywhere, embedded live below.

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What the YouTube Keyword Tool does

YouTube search behaves nothing like Google search: people type "how to", "review", "vs", "tutorial", and "asmr" patterns that reflect watch intent, not read intent. This tool expands your seed keyword through real YouTube suggestion data, with volume, CPC, competition, and 12-month trend on each phrase — the starting point for any video content strategy.

For publishers, this is double-duty research: video keywords tell you which topics deserve a video treatment (or a video embed in an existing post), and "vs" and "review" phrases often translate straight back into text content. Validate the crossover demand with the Google Keyword Tool — topics strong in both engines deserve both formats.

How to use it

  1. Enter a seed topic, product, or channel theme.
  2. Review the video-intent phrases — tutorials, reviews, comparisons, walkthroughs.
  3. Sort by trend to catch rising formats before they saturate.
  4. Use the exact phrasing in your video title and opening line — YouTube matches heavily on both.

YouTube Keyword Tool FAQ

Do YouTube keywords differ from Google keywords?

Substantially. YouTube queries skew toward demonstration and entertainment intent — how-to, review, versus, "with me" formats. A topic can be huge on YouTube and modest on Google, or the reverse, which is exactly what this tool reveals.

Where should I use these keywords in a video?

Title first, then the first two lines of the description, then naturally in your spoken intro (YouTube auto-transcribes and indexes speech). Tags matter far less than they used to.

Can text-focused publishers use this?

Yes — "vs", "review", and "tutorial" phrases with strong YouTube demand almost always have a text-search counterpart, and embedding a matching video in your article can lift engagement signals on the page.