Youtube Video Tag Extractor

Get YouTube thumbnails in high-definition with a single click. Choose from multiple resolutions and download them for free with ease.

Quick and Easy

3 Simple Steps to Extract YouTube Tags

Paste the YouTube Video URL

Copy the URL of any YouTube video from your browser's address bar and paste it into the input field above.

Hit the “Download” Button

Click “Download” and the tool reads the video's metadata, returning every tag attached to it in its original order.

Select and Export Tags

Copy the full tag list with one click, or select individual tags to test in your own video descriptions and uploads.

Key Features of the Tool

What This Tool Does

No Account Required

Paste a URL and get your results. No email, no sign-up form, and nothing about your visit is stored on our servers.

Works on Any Device

The tool runs in any modern browser on desktop, tablet, or phone. There's nothing to install and nothing to configure.

Full Tag List, One-Click Copy

Every tag returns in the order YouTube stores it, with a single button to copy the entire list to your clipboard for pasting into a spreadsheet or your own video settings.

Works on Any Public Video

Extract tags from any video your browser can play, whether it was uploaded yesterday or five years ago, on a channel with ten subscribers or ten million.

Reading and Acting on Tag Data

XR Save Youtube Video e1777929675163

How the Tag Extractor Pulls Tag Data from YouTube

The tool requests the public metadata YouTube attaches to a video page, the same data your browser already loads when you watch the video. It parses that metadata for the tags field and renders it as a readable list. Nothing is scraped from private dashboards or YouTube Studio, so the extractor only works on tags the video’s owner has made publicly visible.

What To Do With a Competitor's Tag List

A tag list on its own is just words. The value comes from pattern-spotting across several videos in the same niche: which terms repeat, which are broad versus specific, and which match what you’d type into YouTube’s search bar yourself. Build a shortlist from videos that are outperforming yours, then test the strongest terms in your own next upload rather than copying a list wholesale.

Using Extracted Tags Responsibly

Tags are part of a video’s public metadata, so viewing them carries no more risk than reading a video’s title or description. You are responsible for ensuring your use of extracted tag data complies with YouTube’s Terms of Service. XR Save does not store, redistribute, or claim ownership of any tag data, video content, or channel information returned by this tool.

Frequently Asked Questions

Most Relevant FAQs for the YouTube Video Tag Extractor

How do I extract YouTube tags?

Simply paste the YouTube video URL into the input field and hit “Download.” The tool will automatically fetch all tags associated with the video.

Yes, the YouTube Video Tag Extractor is completely free to use. There are no limitations or sign-ups required.

Yes, once the tags are extracted, you can either copy them directly or export them as a PDF for later use.

You can export the tags in PDF format, making them easy to store and share.

Yes, the YouTube Video Tag Extractor works on mobile, tablet, and desktop devices, ensuring that you can access it wherever you need it.

There is no limit to the number of tags you can extract. You can extract all the tags associated with any video.

Yes. Tags are part of a video’s public metadata, visible to anyone who knows where to look in a video’s page source. Viewing them doesn’t violate YouTube’s Terms of Service, though you’re responsible for how you use that data afterward.

The tool reads the video’s live metadata at the moment you submit the URL, so results reflect exactly what’s published, not a delayed or cached snapshot.

No. The extractor can only read metadata that YouTube makes publicly visible, so private videos and unlisted videos without a shared link won’t return results.

A full list of the tags attached to the video’s metadata, in the order YouTube stores them, along with the total tag count.

Blogs

Our Writings

2