A YouTube video in Chicago style usually needs the creator, quoted title, platform name, posting date, and direct URL.
If you need to cite a YouTube video in Chicago style, the good news is that the pattern is simple once you know what to pull from the page. Most mistakes come from using the wrong name, skipping the upload date, or mixing up notes with bibliography entries.
Chicago gives you two common routes: Notes and Bibliography, which many history and humanities classes use, and Author-Date, which shows up in some social science work. A YouTube citation can fit either one. The parts stay close. The punctuation changes.
This article walks through the pieces you need, shows what changes between the two Chicago systems, and points out the small details that often cost marks. If you only need one clean rule to hold onto, it’s this: cite the person or channel that made the video, not YouTube itself, then add the video title, the date it was posted, and the link.
What To Pull From The Video Page
Before you write anything, open the video and gather the source details. Don’t start typing from memory. YouTube pages can show a display name, a handle, a shortened date, and a title that uses odd capitalization. You want the version that best identifies the upload.
Most of the time, you’ll need these parts:
- Creator name or channel name
- Title of the video in quotation marks
- YouTube as the platform
- Date the video was posted
- Direct URL
You may also add a time stamp in a note if you’re pointing to one exact moment in a long video. That’s useful when you quote a line from minute 12 or refer to one scene in a lecture, interview, or documentary clip.
Chicago Cite YouTube Video Rules For Clean Entries
The first choice is the author line. Use the real name if the creator is clearly named and that name matters to the source. Use the channel name when that is the clearest label on the page. If both appear and both matter, you can work them together in a note.
The title of the video goes in quotation marks. “YouTube” is the site name, not the author. The posting date should be the date shown on the video page, not the day you watched it. Then add the full URL.
That pattern lines up with the advice in The Chicago Manual of Style’s YouTube citation FAQ, which says the item itself should drive the citation, with YouTube details added to identify where it appears.
Notes And Bibliography Format
In Notes and Bibliography, your first full note carries the full source. The bibliography entry flips the creator name so it can sort by last name. That’s the main change many students miss.
Here’s the basic shape:
- Note: First Name Last Name or Channel Name, “Video Title,” YouTube, posted Month Day, Year, URL.
- Bibliography: Last Name, First Name. “Video Title.” YouTube. Posted Month Day, Year. URL.
If the upload comes from a brand, museum, news outlet, or public office, the channel name often works best as the creator. If the person in the video is not the one who posted it, cite the uploader unless your teacher wants the speaker named first.
Author-Date Format
Author-Date keeps the same source facts, though the date moves closer to the author name. Your in-text citation then points readers to the reference list.
A common pattern looks like this:
- Reference list: Creator Last Name, First Name. Year. “Video Title.” YouTube video, length if useful. Month Day, Year posted. URL.
- In-text: (Last Name Year)
If no personal name is available, use the channel name in the author spot. If no clear date appears, check your class rules before using an access date. Many instructors still want the posted date whenever the platform shows one.
| Source Detail | What To Use | Common Slip |
|---|---|---|
| Author | Creator or channel that posted the video | Listing YouTube as the author |
| Title | Exact video title in quotation marks | Using plain text with no quotation marks |
| Platform | YouTube | Leaving out the platform name |
| Date | Posted date shown on the video page | Using the day you watched it |
| URL | Direct link to the video | Linking only to the channel page |
| Name Order In Notes | First name first | Flipping the name like a bibliography entry |
| Name Order In Bibliography | Last name first when a personal author is used | Keeping note order in the bibliography |
| Time Stamp | Add it in notes when citing one exact moment | Forgetting it after quoting one short segment |
How To Cite Different Kinds Of YouTube Uploads
Not every YouTube source looks the same. A lecture from a university channel, a music video, a news clip, and a podcast upload can all call for small tweaks. The core format stays steady, though the creator line may shift.
When The Channel Name Is The Best Author
Use the channel name when that is the clearest source identity. This is common with brands, agencies, magazines, schools, and media outlets. A channel like NASA, TED, or a university department is often better cited by that name than by the host on screen.
Purdue OWL’s Chicago material on web and multimedia sources backs that wider pattern: identify the party responsible for the content, then add the web details needed to find it again. You can see that logic in Purdue OWL’s Chicago web source model.
When A Person’s Name Should Lead
If the video is clearly tied to one creator, lecturer, speaker, or filmmaker, use that person’s name. This is common with essays, tutorials, speeches, interviews on personal channels, and creator-led commentary videos.
If the page shows a real name and a channel label, pick the one your reader can match most easily. In a class paper, your instructor may want the real name when it is available. In casual academic use, the channel name often works fine if that is how the source is known.
What To Do With Time Stamps
Chicago notes can carry a time stamp after the citation when you point to one exact line or section. That keeps your reference sharp. It also saves readers from scrubbing through a 90-minute video to find one quote.
Use a time stamp only when you cite a specific moment. Don’t add one for a general mention of the full video.
| Video Type | Best Author Choice | Extra Detail To Watch |
|---|---|---|
| Personal tutorial or essay | Creator’s real name or creator brand | Match the page label readers will find fastest |
| University lecture upload | School or department channel | Name the lecturer in the sentence if useful |
| News clip | News outlet channel | Use the upload date shown on YouTube |
| Podcast video upload | Podcast or network name | Add a time stamp for one quoted passage |
| Music video | Artist or official channel | Keep the exact video title in quotes |
Sample Citations You Can Model
These models are easy to adapt once you swap in your own details.
Notes And Bibliography Example
Note:
1. CrashCourse, “The French Revolution: Crash Course World History #29,” YouTube, posted August 16, 2012, https://www.youtube.com/.
Bibliography:
CrashCourse. “The French Revolution: Crash Course World History #29.” YouTube. Posted August 16, 2012. https://www.youtube.com/.
Author-Date Example
Reference list:
CrashCourse. 2012. “The French Revolution: Crash Course World History #29.” YouTube. Posted August 16, 2012. https://www.youtube.com/.
In-text:
(CrashCourse 2012)
Those samples show the pattern, not a final plug-and-play source. Use the exact URL of your video, not the front page of YouTube. If your source has a named speaker and a channel host, check your assignment sheet and stay consistent across your paper.
Mistakes That Make A Citation Look Off
A sloppy YouTube citation stands out fast. Readers may not call it out by name, though they’ll spot that something feels wrong. These are the errors that show up most often:
- Using YouTube as the author
- Leaving out quotation marks around the video title
- Dropping the posted date when the page shows one
- Using a channel link instead of the direct video URL
- Mixing note punctuation with bibliography punctuation
- Adding a time stamp to every citation, even when it isn’t tied to one quote
If you want one last accuracy check, the University of Queensland’s Chicago 18th edition examples for multimedia show the same broad pattern: identify the source clearly, then give the details needed to retrieve it. Their Chicago multimedia examples are handy when your source is not a plain web page.
A Simple Way To Get It Right Every Time
Open the video page. Copy the creator or channel name. Copy the exact title. Note the posted date. Paste the direct URL. Then place those parts into the Chicago format your class uses. That’s it.
If you’re writing in Notes and Bibliography, build the full note first, then turn it into a bibliography entry by flipping the personal name and adjusting the punctuation. If you’re writing in Author-Date, move the year close to the author and make sure your in-text citation matches the author name in your reference list.
Once you learn that one pattern, citing a YouTube video stops feeling messy. It becomes a small formatting job, not a guessing game.
References & Sources
- The Chicago Manual Of Style.“How do I cite a YouTube video in Chicago style?”Shows that a YouTube citation should identify the item itself, then add platform details such as the URL.
- Purdue OWL.“Web Sources.”Gives the Chicago pattern for web-based sources, including author, title, date, site name, and URL.
- The University Of Queensland Library.“Chicago 18th Edition Notes And Bibliography: Multimedia.”Provides sample Chicago entries for multimedia sources and helps confirm how online video details should be arranged.