Premiere
A Premiere takes a finished, uploaded video and schedules its first play as a shared event. Until the start time, the video appears as an upcoming Premiere with a countdown. At the start, every viewer watching plays the same timestamp in sync and shares a live chat. After the Premiere finishes, the video becomes a regular VOD upload like any other.
A YouTube Premiere is a scheduled debut of a pre-uploaded video — viewers watch the upload together at a set start time, with a live chat running alongside.
Why Premiere matters for YouTube creators
Premieres bridge the gap between live and VOD. They give a polished, edited upload the energy and engagement of a live event — viewers can chat in real time, send Super Chat, and feel part of a release moment — without requiring the creator to actually broadcast live. Premieres are especially effective for major project releases: documentaries, season finales, big announcements. The combined Premiere+VOD watch period typically produces 1.5-2x the first-week viewership of a standard upload because the scheduled-release dynamic primes the audience to be there at launch.
Premiere in practice
A documentary creator Premieres a 45-minute investigative piece; 8,000 viewers watch it together, $2,400 in Super Chat arrives during the live chat window, and the VOD picks up 1.2M views in the following 30 days.
A music creator Premieres a new music video at midnight in their primary market; the synchronised release amplifies social chatter and drives the video into Trending within hours.
See Premiere on real channels
FameLifter pulls public premiere data for 500K+ YouTube channels — refreshed hourly via the official YouTube Data API v3.