Ask any YouTube video your own questions — chat with an AI that has read the full transcript and answers in seconds.
watch?v=, youtu.be, Shorts, embed, or the 11-character ID — not a channel @handle or playlist link.
YouTube Video Chat turns any public YouTube video into a Q&A you can drive. Paste a watch URL, Shorts link, or video ID, and chat with an AI that has read the full transcript on your behalf. Ask "did she mention pricing?", "what was the example at the 12-minute mark?", or "summarize the second segment" — answers stream in within seconds.
It is a real conversation, not a single search — keep asking follow-ups, dig into a moment, or pull out a quote. Every chat is saved per video, so you can reopen the same link a week later and pick up exactly where you left off.
Built for learners, researchers, journalists, and busy viewers who would rather ask than scrub a 45-minute timeline.
Follow-up questions remember the previous turns so you can drill into a topic without restating context every time.
Every answer is based on the video's actual transcript — not the title, description, or thumbnail — so replies stay tied to what was actually spoken.
Replies appear in real time so you can start reading the moment the AI starts answering — no waiting for a final blob.
Every chat is saved against that specific video, so reopening the link days later brings back the whole conversation.
Drop in a YouTube watch URL, Shorts link, youtu.be link, or the 11-character video ID.
Type anything — a fact check, a recap of one segment, a clarifying definition. The AI answers from the transcript.
Add follow-ups, request examples, or ask for quotes. The chat is saved per video so you can return any time.
Ask "explain this concept like I'm new" or "give me an example" instead of pausing and rewinding the lecture.
Skip to the question that matters — "did they mention price?", "what was the verdict?" — without scrubbing the whole timeline.
Pull quotes, structure the lesson into notes, or ask the AI to bullet a single segment for your own notebook.
Watching a long interview or stream? Ask follow-ups on the parts that struck you instead of relying on memory.
Ask the AI to point at the moment a claim was made so you can verify it against the source video yourself.
Run a panel or keynote video through chat, ask "what is the main argument?", and walk into the meeting prepared.