HubTools

YouTube Stats Card Generator

Pre-loaded with subscribers, views, watch hours, and likes — celebrate a milestone or post a monthly channel recap.

What is a YouTube stats card?

A YouTube stats card is a single image that summarizes a channel's headline numbers — subscribers, views, watch hours, and likes — over a defined period or as a milestone celebration. Creators post them to community tabs, pin them as channel banner art when crossing a subscriber threshold, or include them as the closing frame of a recap video. Watch hours is the metric that actually matters for monetization (4,000 watch hours over 365 days unlocks the Partner Program), so YouTube stats cards typically lead with it after subscriber count. The Hub Tools generator pre-loads all four metrics, defaults to a fiery red-orange ember background that mirrors the YouTube brand, and exports either a square community-tab image or a YouTube Thumbnail (1280×720) for end-screen overlays. Pair it with the Screenshot Mockup Generator for a laptop frame around your stats and the QR Code Generator for a channel-link QR.
Period preset
Last 30 days
Abbrev.Trends

About YouTube Studio analytics

YouTube Studio surfaces metrics in five tabs: Overview (views, watch time, subscribers), Reach (impressions, CTR), Engagement (avg view duration), Audience (returning vs new), Revenue (RPM, CPM).
  • Default window is 'Last 28 days' — switch to 7 / 90 / Lifetime in the date selector
  • Impressions = how often a video thumbnail was shown to a viewer (Browse, Suggested, Search, etc.)
  • Click-through rate (CTR) of 4-10% is healthy; below 2% suggests a thumbnail problem
  • Watch time is shown in hours by default; switch to minutes for short-form Shorts analysis

Frequently asked questions

Where do I find my channel's watch hours and subscriber count?
Open YouTube Studio (studio.youtube.com), click Analytics in the left nav, then the Overview tab shows views, watch time (in hours), and subscribers gained over your selected window — the default is Last 28 days. Your lifetime subscriber count appears on your channel page directly. For more detail, the Audience and Engagement tabs break out average view duration, click-through rate, and unique viewers.