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YouTube rolls out year-end recap reels with full 2025 trending rankings

YouTube’s new Recap feature lets users revisit their year of viewing with shareable highlight cards as the platform publishes its biggest U.S. trends of 2025.

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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Dec 2, 2025, 12:16 PM EST
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A set of three mobile screenshots from YouTube’s 2025 Recap feature, showing a title screen, a list of top user interests like DIY home improvement and AI trends, and a creator card featuring a middle-aged man with glasses indicating the viewer is in the top 10% of their audience.
Image: YouTube / Google
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YouTube is doing the year-in-review thing in earnest this December — but this time it’s personal. Today, the company rolled out YouTube Recap, a shareable, personalized highlight reel that stitches together up to a dozen “cards” about what you watched this year: top channels, favorite interests, how your viewing evolved, and even a playful “personality type” based on your watch history. The feature soft-launched in New Zealand and goes live in North America on Dec. 2, with a global rollout over the week; you’ll find your Recap on the homepage or under the “You” tab on mobile and desktop.

If that sounds eerily familiar, it’s because YouTube is explicitly standing on the shoulders of Spotify Wrapped and similar end-of-year recaps. For years, YouTube Music has given subscribers a music-first Recap; this year, YouTube widened the net to capture everything a person watched or listened to across the platform, from longform essays to five-second Shorts. Expect music highlights to remain part of the package — if you streamed lots of tracks, your Recap will call out top artists, songs and genres and offer deeper links into YouTube Music.

The Recap isn’t just stats and bar charts. YouTube says the team iterated heavily — “nine rounds of feedback and over 50 concept tests,” according to its Culture & Trends post — and designed the experience to be social and snackable: bright, card-style screens that people can screenshot or share to their feeds. The company also built in personality tags (think “Adventurer,” “Skill Builder,” or “Creative Spirit”) after analyzing viewing patterns; the most common archetypes reportedly ended up being the Sunshiner, the Wonder Seeker and the Connector. It’s a softer, more human presentation than a raw leaderboard.

There’s history here that matters. YouTube famously tried a single, platform-wide end-of-year video with Rewind from 2011 to 2020, but abandoned that format after 2020, saying one Rewind couldn’t reflect the breadth of the creator community. Recap is, in effect, the inverse: instead of one top-down ode to the year, it hands every user a tiny, bespoke yearbook. That’s an adjustment in how YouTube frames its cultural role — less curator, more personal mirror.

Alongside Recap, YouTube published its 2025 trending lists for the U.S.: top topics, creators, songs, Shorts hits and podcasts. The lists — which include entries like MrBeast as the top creator and mainstream hits from Netflix’s “KPop Demon Hunters” — are compiled by the YouTube Culture & Trends team using a mix of views, uploads and creator activity, with specific rules (for example, top creators are ranked by subscribers gained in-country in 2025). The point of the lists is to point at what surprised YouTube’s metrics this year, not to crown a single “most important” thing.

What this means for creators and marketers is twofold. First, Recap is a new native reason for fans to promote creators’ work: if a card calls out a channel as “your top creator” or a video as a defining watch, those moments are naturally shareable — an organic discovery loop. Second, the editorial lists and the Recap’s short, social-friendly design both reward formats that are easy to repackage (clips, Shorts, highlight moments). In practice, that means creators who make moments that are clip-ready or who encourage viewers to save/share will be preferentially amplified.

There are, naturally, questions. Personal recaps are joyful when they’re right and flat when they miss nuance: how does YouTube decide what counts as a meaningful watch? How does it treat logged-out or incognito time? YouTube’s public note about Recap leans on aggregate viewing signals and the user’s watch history; it doesn’t change privacy controls, but it does make clearer how much the platform can distill about personal taste into a single shareable graphic. For people who like the thrill of a perfectly matched Wrapped, Recap will be fun — for people who value friction between data and identity, it’s a reminder that these platforms are building detailed portraits of attention.

For those who care about the cultural ripple effects: end-of-year recaps are more than vanity metrics now. They shape conversation, memes and discovery lists in January and beyond. A track or creator elevated in a Recap or YouTube’s trending report can get a second surge of streams, comments and algorithmic attention — which in turn changes what the next Recap looks like. That feedback loop is why platforms keep iterating on presentation: aesthetics matter because presentation changes behavior.

If you want to try your Recap today, head to the YouTube homepage or the “You” tab; it should appear there once the rollout reaches your region. If you’re a creator, use this week to make short, easy-to-share highlights and call-to-action cards you want your fans to pin to their Recaps. If you’re a marketer, consider what a branded tie-in would look like — but remember the one golden rule of Recap content: authenticity wins. Audiences reshare what feels true to them, not what feels like an ad.

YouTube Recap is the platform’s attempt to hand back a personalized story to users in a year when individual taste is the thing that spreads culture. It’s a safer, friendlier cousin to Rewind — less grand gesture, more pocket album — and it comes with a timely nudge for creators to make moments that invite sharing. If you love seeing your year in tiny, colorful cards, today is your month; if you worry about data doubling as identity, Recap is a reminder to check your settings and ask what you want your year to say.


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