Browse Features
Browse Features groups together impressions a video earns on the YouTube Home page, the Subscriptions feed, and "What to watch next" panels on TV. For most channels Browse is the single largest source of views. Inside YouTube Studio Analytics, Browse Features sits in the Traffic Sources panel and tells you what share of impressions came from algorithmic Home placement.
Browse Features is YouTube's traffic source label for impressions delivered on the Home page and the Subscriptions feed — the largest discovery surface on the platform.
Why Browse Features matters for YouTube creators
Browse traffic is the engine of channel growth. A video that "breaks out" almost always does so via Browse. Optimising for Browse means optimising thumbnails — Browse viewers are scrolling without a search query, so the thumbnail is fighting for attention against everything else on Home. A 1-2 percentage-point CTR lift translates to 3-5x more Browse impressions in many cases because the algorithm uses CTR as the primary signal for expanding distribution on this surface. Browse is also where seasonal and topical relevance matter most: viewers on Home see videos chosen because they're likely to watch right now, not because they searched for the topic.
Browse Features in practice
A history-essay channel sees 78% of impressions come from Browse. A redesigned thumbnail style with high-contrast subjects lifts average Browse CTR from 4.2% to 7.1% across a quarter and channel views double.
A how-to channel notices Browse impressions drop after switching to denser, text-heavy thumbnails — Browse rewards readability at small sizes.
See Browse Features on real channels
FameLifter pulls public browse features data for 500K+ YouTube channels — refreshed hourly via the official YouTube Data API v3.