TOOL ยท FREE

AI YouTube Title Generator

Type a one-line idea, get 10 click-worthy YouTube titles. Tuned for retention and CTR.

HOW IT WORKS

Three steps to your cut

STEP00:00:00:0001

Describe the video

One sentence โ€” topic and audience.

STEP00:00:01:0002

Pick a flavor

Listicle, how-to, drama, contrarian.

STEP00:00:02:0003

Cue spits 10 titles

Different angles each.

STEP00:00:03:0004

Pick and refine

Star strong ones, regenerate the weak.

What makes it different

FEATURES ยท ON-SET

10 angles per run

Not 10 of the same.

Length-aware

Under 60 chars.

Brackets + numbers

Used when they help.

No clickbait fluff

Promises stay grounded.

Regenerate freely

Fresh output each run.

Free, no signup

Type and run.

VideoCue vs ChatGPT prompting yourself

Feature
VideoCue
ChatGPT prompting yourself
Tuned for YouTube CTR
Multiple angles per run
You write the prompt
Free
Length-aware

READY ยท ROLL CAMERA

Try AI YouTube Title Generator free

No signup. No watermark. Use it as often as you need.

Open the tool

Frequently Asked Questions

Titles are a discipline, not an inspiration

The standard YouTube creator workflow for titles: stare at the upload screen, type six bad ideas, pick the least bad, hit publish, regret it three hours later when the click-through rate refuses to budge. VideoCue's AI Title Generator collapses that loop. You describe the video in a sentence, pick a tone, and get ten distinct angles โ€” listicle, contrarian, payoff-driven, identity-anchored, narrative-hook, and more โ€” in the time it takes to refill your coffee.

But the tool is only half the win. The other half is knowing what makes a title work in 2026's algorithm, and what gets you punished.

Anatomy of a clickable title

A title that performs has three traits, in roughly this order of importance:

  1. A clear promise. The viewer can predict what they'll get if they click. "How I edit 4 videos in a single weekend" promises a process. "I tried 50 cameras under $500" promises a comparison. Promise-free titles ("My day", "Vibes") underperform unless your channel is a brand with built-in audience trust.
  2. An interesting frame. Same promise, sharper angle. "How I edit 4 videos in a weekend" โ†’ "The pre-edit ritual that makes 4 videos a weekend possible." Same outcome, but the frame implies there's a non-obvious method.
  3. A surface-readable length. YouTube truncates titles at ~60 characters in mobile feeds. Anything past that is invisible to most viewers. Our tool stays under that cap automatically.

What doesn't work as reliably as creators assume: ALL CAPS, repeated punctuation ("!!"), and bracketed clickbait tags ([SHOCKING], [PART 3]). They feel decisive when you write them, but they read as low-trust on the homepage. Cue avoids these by default.

The ten angles, explained

Each generation produces ten titles spanning the angles a good editor would try:

  • Direct payoff: "How to X in Y minutes." Honest, search-friendly, low-mystery.
  • Curiosity gap: "The one thing X creators don't tell you about Y." High open-rate, requires the video actually deliver.
  • Contrarian: "X is overrated. Here's what to do instead." Tribally satisfying for the audience that already agrees.
  • Listicle: "5 ways to X" or "7 mistakes in Y." Reliable, mildly fatigued, still works.
  • Identity: "What every X-er gets wrong about Y." Speaks to a group; group members feel called out.
  • Personal narrative: "I tried X for 30 days." The viewer comes for the result, stays for the journey.
  • Question: "Is X actually worth it?" Implicit comparison, often performs well when the answer surprises.
  • Numbers: "$X / Y hours / Z attempts." Specificity reads as authentic, even if the number is approximate.
  • Stakes: "Why X matters now." Time-bounded relevance.
  • Transformation: "From X to Y in Z." A before/after structure that previews the arc.

Pick the angle that fits the video's actual content. A pure tutorial does well with payoff. A polarising opinion piece does well with contrarian. Don't slap a curiosity-gap title on a how-to โ€” the viewer will bounce when the video doesn't deliver the mystery the title hinted at.

How to pick from ten

A useful test: read each title aloud and ask, "would I click this if I didn't make it?" The titles that survive that question are usually the ones that perform. A weaker test creators sometimes default to: "is this clever?" Cleverness is decoration. The viewer in the homepage feed doesn't notice clever โ€” they notice clear.

Star the top three, then run our YouTube Thumbnail Downloader on three reference videos in your niche to see how their thumbnails pair with their titles. Often a title is great in isolation but conflicts with the thumbnail's visual hook. The pair has to read as one message in the half-second a viewer scans the homepage.

Common failure modes

  • Two competing hooks. "How I edited 4 videos in a weekend (and what I learned about productivity)." Pick one.
  • Generic-on-arrival. "Best tips for creators." If you can swap "creators" for any noun and the title still works, it's too generic.
  • Promising more than the video delivers. Causes the worst signal YouTube's algorithm tracks: high CTR followed by high drop-off. Hurts you for weeks.
  • Channel-internal language. Insider terms only your existing subscribers understand. Fine for retention; bad for discovery.

Beyond the title

A title is necessary but not sufficient. The thumbnail does at least as much work, and packaging research (see our Channel Thumbnail Grid and Tag Extractor tools) is how serious creators reverse-engineer what works in their niche. Spend an hour studying your top 10 competitors before writing your next title and you'll out-perform a thousand A/B tests run on weak inputs.

Privacy

Your descriptions are sent to Cue for one generation cycle and immediately discarded. We don't log video topics, build profiles, or train on your inputs. Generation is free with reasonable rate limits.

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