June 22, 2026
Google is testing AI chatbot search for YouTube


Google is trying out an AI Mode-like search experience for YouTube. The company is now testing โ€œa new way to search on YouTube that feels more like a conversation,โ€ with results pulling in things like longform videos, YouTube Shorts, and text about what youโ€™re searching for. The โ€œexperimentโ€ is now available if youโ€™re a YouTube Premium subscriber in the US who is 18 or older.

I turned it on for my account. Now, in the search bar, I see an โ€œAsk YouTubeโ€ button, and clicking the search bar shows prompts to ask like โ€œfunny baby elephant playing clips,โ€ โ€œsummary of the rules of volleyball,โ€ and โ€œshort history of the Apollo 11 moon landing.โ€ If I keep the search box blank but click the Ask YouTube button, YouTube takes me to a full page with suggested searches and a text box to ask a question.

When you search with Ask YouTube, YouTube briefly shows a mostly-blank page with a loading icon, and after a few seconds, fills it out with text and details. I tested it with the โ€œshort history of the Apollo 11 moon landingโ€ prompt. At the top of the results was a bunch of text summarizing the mission, including a bulleted list of milestones like the date of the lunar landing and Neil Armstrongโ€™s first step on the Moon. Then, the page included a video about the launch timestamped to a section about the launch day from a channel called โ€œThe Life Guide,โ€ followed by galleries of videos under headers like โ€œFrom Launch to Splashdown,โ€ โ€œHistoric Footage and Behind-the-Scenes,โ€ and a series of Shorts about โ€œMoments on the Surface.โ€ (I assume YouTube is pulling the text for these sections from the videos highlighted in the search results.)

At the end, the page has a few more suggested prompts, including โ€œWho were the Apollo 11 astronautsโ€ and (perhaps worryingly) โ€œApollo 11 conspiracy theories,โ€ and a text box I can use to ask a follow-up question or start a new search. I clicked the โ€œWho were the Apollo 11 astronautsโ€ and got a new, slightly differently-formatted set of results, including a grid with background about astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins. Searching for โ€œApollo 11 conspiracy theoriesโ€ just showed a typical list of YouTube search results, however.

I threw Ask YouTube another test to see how it fared with something Iโ€™m very familiar with: Valveโ€™s new Steam Controller, which I published a review of today. I asked, โ€œWhat is the Steam Controller,โ€ and YouTube gave an overview of the controller, pointed to Valveโ€™s new video about the controller, and highlighted both longform reviews and a โ€œQuick Hands-On Reviewsโ€ section featuring Shorts (including our new Short published today and one from last November).

It was all mostly right, but I did catch a factual flub: YouTube claimed that the old, discontinued Steam Controller had no joysticks, when it actually has one. It was a reminder that, as potentially useful as these AI-created search result pages might seem, you need to do your due diligence to make sure theyโ€™re accurate.

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