YouTube keyword research
Find what people actually search for, then package your video so YouTube can match it to the right viewers.
Great content with weak discovery loses to decent content with sharp packaging. Keyword research is not about stuffing phrases into a title — it is about understanding the language viewers use when they have a problem your video can solve. When your metadata, hook, and topic line up with that language, you improve the odds your video appears in search and related recommendations.
This category bundles twelve browser-based tools that help you move from a vague idea to a concrete publishing plan: generate tag ideas from a topic, expand into long-tail phrases, simulate autocomplete-style prompts, estimate how crowded a term might feel, compare related terms, and pressure-test whether a query behaves more like YouTube search or Google web search. Each tool is designed to be fast enough to use before every upload.
Use them in combination: start with a seed topic, capture a shortlist of tags and angles, then jump into title and description tools when you are ready to draft metadata. If you are batch planning, pair keyword work with the content planner so ideas stay organized.
- Clarify the video outcome — one primary viewer problem or goal per video.
- Generate tags and variants — run the tag generator, then long-tail and related tools for adjacent phrasing.
- Check intent — use search-intent helpers so your hook matches YouTube behavior.
- Draft metadata — move to metadata tools with your best phrases already on hand.
All keyword tools
12 tools in this category.
Keyword work connects directly to titles, descriptions, and content calendars.
Practical answers on tags, search intent, and how keyword work fits into titles — use these alongside the generators above when planning your next video or batch of uploads.
It is learning the exact phrases people type or say into search when they want a problem solved. When your title and hook order words the same way viewers think, you reduce friction from “search → click → satisfied viewer.”
Aim for a small cluster that matches your primary topic plus tight variants. Long unrelated tag lists dilute clarity and tempt you to chase trends that do not match the video — which hurts retention once someone clicks.
Tags are a supporting signal for topic disambiguation (especially when titles are broad). They are not a magic lever. Your CTR, retention, and whether people watch more of your catalog usually move the needle more than tag count alone.
People on YouTube often want demonstrations, opinions, or step-by-step guidance — not a blog summary. A keyword that looks strong on web search may still need a video-native angle, pacing, and title framing to perform on YouTube.
Helpful, not mandatory. Many channels grow with disciplined manual research, consistent uploads, and packaging tests. Paid tools add speed and historical data; free tools like these help you draft and stress — check language before you film.
Yes. Open any tool in this category without logging in. Your topic inputs stay local to your browser session unless you choose to share or save them elsewhere.