How long is my YouTube playlist?
The main question
Paste your playlist and get the total watch time in hours, minutes, and seconds, with a clear count of videos included in the calculation.
Paste a YouTube playlist URL and see the total watch time, speed-adjusted duration, counted videos, unavailable videos, and a daily plan. This page is built for the exact question people ask before starting a long course, music queue, tutorial series, or saved playlist.
Direct answer
Get the total duration without opening every video or adding times by hand.
Speed-aware
Compare 1x with 1.25x, 1.5x, 1.75x, 2x, or your own playback speed.
Planning-friendly
Turn a long playlist into a daily viewing estimate instead of guessing from video count.
Quick answer
The calculator reads your playlist, adds the available video durations, and turns the result into a practical watch-time breakdown. It also works for single videos and several supported YouTube links pasted on separate lines.
Use a YouTube playlist URL, watch URL, youtu.be link, Shorts link, embed URL, watch_videos URL, or a raw playlist ID. If you are comparing several playlists, put one link on each line.
If you only want part of a playlist, set the start and end video numbers. If you usually watch lectures at 1.5x or 2x, enter the speed before calculating.
You will see the total playlist duration, the time at common playback speeds, counted videos, unavailable videos, export and share options, and a daily watch plan.
Playlist time planner
Knowing that a playlist is eight hours long is only the first step. Speed rows, unavailable video notes, and a daily watch plan help you decide whether to start now, save it for later, or split it across several sessions.
What this page covers
People search for how long is my YouTube playlist, how long is this playlist, playlist duration, playlist time calculator, and YouTube playlist length. The goal is the same: find the real time commitment before watching.
Paste your playlist and get the total watch time in hours, minutes, and seconds, with a clear count of videos included in the calculation.
Use it when a teacher, creator, friend, or coworker sends a playlist and you want to know whether it fits your available time.
Use the page as a playlist duration calculator for courses, lectures, saved watch queues, tutorials, podcasts, music lists, and channel collections.
Turn the total into a viewing plan. The daily planner helps you estimate how many days the playlist will take at your normal pace.
If you paste one video instead of a playlist, the tool still shows the video length and faster playback estimates.
Educational videos are often watched faster than 1x. The result shows how much time you save at common speeds without manual math.
Before you start watching
Five lectures can take longer than thirty short clips. Video count is useful, but total duration is what tells you whether a playlist fits into your day.
Private, deleted, live, premiere, or region-restricted videos may not return a usable duration. The result separates counted videos from unavailable ones so the estimate is easier to trust.
A playlist that takes 10 hours at 1x takes less time at 1.5x or 2x. The speed rows show the practical watch time, not only the raw duration.
Useful situations
This page is useful when a playlist is more than entertainment. Courses, study plans, work training, video homework, and long saved lists all need realistic time estimates.
Online courses
A course split into many small videos can feel lighter than it is. The playlist length shows the full time commitment before you begin.
Paste the course playlist, choose your usual lecture speed, and check the daily plan.
You know whether it is an evening project, a weekend plan, or a longer course.
Exam review
When a deadline is close, you need remaining watch time, not just the number of lessons left.
Use the video range fields if you already watched part of the playlist.
You can decide whether to review everything or focus on the heaviest sections.
Video homework
Teachers and tutors can use playlist duration to see whether a shared playlist is fair for the time students have.
Calculate the playlist at 1x and check unavailable videos before sharing the assignment.
Students get a clearer time expectation, and the assignment is easier to explain.
Work training
Onboarding and compliance playlists often have deadlines. A total watch-time estimate makes the calendar more realistic.
Compare 30, 60, and 90 minutes per day in the daily planner.
You can decide whether to watch a little each day or block a longer session.
Creators
A beginner playlist can grow into a full-day watch queue without the creator noticing.
Calculate the full playlist, then test a shorter range that might work better for new viewers.
You can split long collections into clearer beginner, intermediate, and advanced paths.
Saved watch queue
Saved documentaries, podcasts, and channel archives can quietly become long lists.
Paste several playlist links on separate lines and compare the result cards.
You can start the playlist that fits your evening instead of abandoning one halfway through.
FAQ
Paste the playlist URL into the calculator and run it. The result shows the total duration, the number of videos counted, unavailable videos, and the watch time at common playback speeds.
Yes. The calculator adds the durations for available videos in the playlist, so you do not need to open each video or add minutes manually.
Yes, as long as YouTube provides data for the playlist and videos. Private playlists, deleted videos, or restricted items may not return normal duration data.
Yes. Paste a single video URL and the page works as a YouTube video length calculator, including 1.25x, 1.5x, 1.75x, and 2x estimates.
Yes. Use the video range fields to set a start and end number. This is useful when you already watched part of a course or only need one module inside a long playlist.
Some videos are private, deleted, region-restricted, live, or otherwise unavailable through YouTube Data API. Those videos may not be included in the total duration, so the result shows the count clearly.
The estimate is as accurate as the video durations YouTube provides. It is strong for public videos with normal durations, but unavailable videos can make the real playlist longer than the counted total.
The playlist duration at 1x does not change, but your real watch time does. That is why the result shows both the raw total and faster playback estimates.
Yes. Calculate the playlist, choose your normal playback speed, and use the daily plan to see how many days it may take. This is more realistic than planning from video count alone.
Yes. Paste one supported YouTube link per line. Each valid link gets its own result card, which makes it easier to compare courses, saved playlists, or watch queues.
Usually no. The site can process normal requests with its server setup. If quota is limited, you may add your own YouTube Data API key for a single request.
No account is created, and the raw URL is not stored as a personal history. A user-provided API key is used for that request and is not saved as a permanent setting.
No. This is an independent watch-time planning tool. It is not owned by YouTube or Google, and results depend on YouTube Data API availability.
Check it now
Use it before starting a course, assigning video homework, planning a commute, or choosing a weekend watch list.
Related page
If you want the broader total-time angle, open the playlist duration calculator page for course and training examples. For a selected start/end section, use the YouTube playlist range calculator , or use the YouTube playlist remaining time calculator when you already started watching. For music queues, open the YouTube Music playlist duration calculator . For faster playback and daily schedule intent, use the YouTube playlist time calculator page, or the YouTube playlist speed calculator page for 1.5x and 2x playback.