AI Video Summarizer

An hour-long video, summarized before your coffee cools. Paste the link, and the AI works through what's said and hands you the points that matter.

Illustration — the summary appears in your chat workspace

How to Summarize a YouTube Video with AI

Three steps between a link and the takeaways — no scrubbing through the timeline.

1Paste the video link

A YouTube link or another public video URL — talks, tutorials, podcasts on video, lectures.

2The AI reads the video

It works from what's actually said — the video's speech and captions — so the summary reflects the content, not the thumbnail.

What did they say about pricing their product?

3Get the summary, then dig in

The summary lands in a chat — ask what was said about a specific topic, request more detail on one section, or a shorter version.

Built for the Videos You Don't Have Time For

Anywhere the talking is long and the point is short.

YouTube video summarizer

Paste a YouTube link and skip to the substance — reviews, interviews, video essays, and hour-long deep dives condensed to minutes.

Lectures and tutorials

Turn recorded lectures and how-to videos into structured notes you can actually study from — concepts, steps, and examples in order.

Talks and webinars

Conference talks, product demos, recorded webinars — get the claims and takeaways without sitting through the intros.

Ask about the video

A video summarizer you can question: “what did they say about X”, “list every tool they mentioned”, “summarize just the ending”.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I summarize a YouTube video?

Paste the video link in the box above and submit. The AI reads the video's speech and captions and returns the summary in a chat, where you can ask for the style you want and keep asking about it.

Does it actually watch the video?

It works from what's said — the spoken audio and captions — which is where the substance of talks, tutorials, and interviews lives. That's what makes the summary faithful to the content.

How long can the video be?

Long videos are fine — hour-plus lectures and podcasts are exactly the point. For very long recordings, ask for a section-by-section summary and then zoom into the parts you care about.

Which videos work?

Public videos with spoken content — YouTube links work best. If a video has no speech or captions to read, there's nothing to summarize from, so music videos won't give much.

Can I get the summary in my language?

Yes — ask for the summary in whatever language you want, regardless of the language spoken in the video.