Production

Lower Thirds

Lower thirds are graphical text overlays positioned in the lower one-third of the screen. They're named for the location, not the size. In documentary and journalism, lower thirds introduce on-screen subjects by name and title; on YouTube, creators use them more flexibly — to label sections, display data points, reinforce a key phrase, or run captions.

Last updated: May 17, 2026
Quick definition

Lower thirds are on-screen text graphics placed in the lower portion of a video — used to introduce speakers, label scenes, or display key information without interrupting the visual.

Why Lower Thirds matters for YouTube creators

Lower thirds are a low-cost retention tool. Adding a brief text overlay at the start of each new segment gives viewers a quick orienting beat and reinforces what comes next, slightly reducing drop-off at section transitions. Branded lower thirds (with the channel's typography and colour palette) also reinforce channel identity in every video frame. The risk is overusing them — heavy text overlays compete with the host on-screen and feel cluttered. A clean, fast (1-3 second) lower third at deliberate moments outperforms persistent overlays.

Lower Thirds in practice

A history channel uses a branded lower third (channel's yellow-text-on-black palette) to introduce every historical figure mentioned; viewer dwell-time on those segments is 12% higher than equivalent segments without overlays.

A finance creator adds an animated lower third reading the upcoming chart's headline at every chart cut — viewers stay engaged through complex data sequences they would otherwise scrub past.

See Lower Thirds on real channels

FameLifter pulls public lower thirds data for 500K+ YouTube channels — refreshed hourly via the official YouTube Data API v3.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need motion graphics software for lower thirds?
Not necessarily. Most editing apps (Premiere, Resolve, Final Cut, CapCut) include lower-third templates. After Effects gives more flexibility but is overkill for most channels.
How long should a lower third stay on screen?
2-4 seconds is typical. Long enough to read, short enough to not crowd the frame. Animated lower thirds (slide in, hold, slide out) feel less intrusive than static ones.
Should I use lower thirds in every video?
Use them when they add information. Mandatory lower-thirds-everywhere is design overkill. The best channels use them surgically — for speaker intros, segment labels, and key data callouts.