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YouTube Shorts will let you search objects in videos with Lens

The new Lens feature in YouTube Shorts lets viewers pause a video, tap on any object, and see visual search results overlaid on the screen.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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May 30, 2025, 5:14 AM EDT
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YouTube Shorts Google Lens search feature
Image: YouTube
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Imagine you’re watching a YouTube Shorts video of someone hiking through the Swiss Alps, and you pause on a distant peak that catches your eye. What if you could tap a button and instantly learn the name of that mountain? Beginning in the coming weeks, that’s exactly the kind of magic YouTube is bringing to its bite-sized videos, thanks to an integration of Google Lens into Shorts.

YouTube’s new Lens feature for Shorts will let viewers search for information about practically anything they spot in a video—animals, plants, landmarks, even products—without ever leaving the Shorts experience. Here’s how it works:

  1. Pause the Short. When you see something worth exploring—a rare orchid, a vintage car, or a famous building—simply tap to pause the clip.
  2. Tap the Lens icon. A small Lens button will appear in the top menu of the Shorts player.
  3. Circle, highlight, or tap. Draw around, highlight, or just tap the object of interest on your screen.
  4. Get answers overlaid. YouTube will overlay visual matches and context-rich search results directly on top of the paused video.
  5. Jump back in. Select a result to dive deeper—whether that’s an article, a map, or shopping options—and then return to the video with a single tap.

This seamless overlay means you won’t have to fumble with screenshots or manually switch between apps. Google Lens has been expanding rapidly—already capable of video-based searches and in-store shopping assistance—and this move brings its powers directly to YouTube’s 2-billion-plus monthly viewers.

Short-form video is officially king. YouTube Shorts surpassed 50 billion daily views earlier this year, challenging TikTok and Instagram Reels in the fast-scroll battleground. Yet until now, short clips have been a mostly passive viewing experience: you watch, you like, you move on. By embedding Lens, YouTube is transforming Shorts into an interactive discovery engine:

  • Enhanced learning. Spot a rare animal on a safari video? Instantly learn its species and habitat.
  • On-the-spot travel research. See a stunning monument? Get facts about the landmark and the exact location the creator filmed.
  • Seamless shopping. Curious about someone’s shoes? Lens can surface e-commerce listings without breaking your browsing flow.

For creators, this opens new avenues for engagement. Tutorials, “Did you know?” clips, and educational channels can now prompt viewers to discover related content in real time. And for brands, it hints at a future where product placements in Shorts are instantly shoppable—though YouTube is holding off on affiliate links for the beta period to keep the experience uncluttered.

With great power comes great responsibility, and YouTube is keen to soothe privacy worries. The company clarifies that this Lens integration will not employ “biometric facial recognition” to single out private individuals. Instead, it may surface info on notable public figures when they appear in a Short, but it won’t identify anyone else. Additionally, the pilot phase won’t include ads in search results, and Shorts containing shopping affiliate links or paid promotions will be excluded initially, ensuring a clean test run.

While competitors like TikTok and Instagram Reels excel at viral trends and duets, neither currently offers built-in, real-time object recognition. To identify something on TikTok, users often screenshot and Google it—an awkward, multi-step process that can disrupt the immersive scroll. YouTube’s Lens leapfrogs that friction, marrying discovery with engagement in a way short-form video has never seen before.

YouTube says the Lens feature will roll out in beta “in the coming weeks,” with a staged release to ensure stability. The initial launch is mobile-only, and available worldwide—though certain regions may experience slight delays. Once it’s live, simply update your YouTube app, head to Shorts, and start exploring.


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