VPH (Views Per Hour) is a YouTube metric that measures the average number of views a video gains per hour since publication. Creators and third-party tools like VidIQ use VPH to spot videos that are overperforming for their age and to gauge early momentum before the algorithm commits to wider distribution.
Example: 4,800 views over 24 hours = 200 VPH
What VPH Actually Tells You
Raw view counts are misleading because they don't account for time. A video with 100,000 views could be a one-week wonder that's already cooling off, or a brand-new upload exploding in real time. VPH solves that by normalizing views against age, giving you a "speed" reading instead of a "distance" reading.
It's most useful in a video's first 24-48 hours, the window when the algorithm is actively testing your content with small audiences and deciding whether to promote it more broadly through Browse, Suggested Videos, and search.
What's a Good VPH on YouTube?
There's no universal benchmark — "good" VPH depends on your channel size, niche, and audience timezone. The table below shows rough tiers most creators see in the first 24 hours after upload, but always compare a video's VPH against your own channel's baseline rather than someone else's.
| VPH Range (first 24h) | Rating | What It Typically Means |
|---|---|---|
| 0-10 VPH | Below Average | Limited initial push; thumbnail, title, or timing may need work |
| 10-100 VPH | Average for Small Channels | Steady early performance for channels under ~50K subscribers |
| 100-1,000 VPH | Strong | Algorithm is taking interest; broader distribution likely |
| 1,000-10,000 VPH | Excellent | Video is overperforming, often promoted to wider Browse audiences |
| 10,000+ VPH | Viral Territory | Candidate for Trending; algorithm pushing aggressively |
Why VPH Matters for the Algorithm
VPH isn't a metric YouTube publishes directly inside YouTube Studio — but it tracks the same underlying signal the algorithm cares most about in a video's early life: velocity. Fast view accumulation tells the system that real viewers are choosing to click and watch, which is the green light for wider promotion.
How VPH Connects to Distribution
- Initial test phase: YouTube shows your video to a small slice of subscribers and Browse users
- Early VPH signals: If CTR and retention are strong, views accelerate
- Algorithm decision: High and sustained VPH triggers expansion into Suggested and Browse
- Compounding effect: More impressions feed more views, which feeds more VPH
- Trending threshold: Sustained extreme VPH can land a video on Trending
How to Track VPH
VPH isn't shown natively in YouTube Studio, so most creators rely on third-party tools or a quick manual calculation.
1. VidIQ
VidIQ's Views Per Hour tracker is the platform's signature feature. It surfaces VPH on every video card across YouTube, lets you sort competitor videos by VPH, and flags outliers that are overperforming for their channel size. If you've ever seen a Chrome extension overlay showing "VPH" numbers on YouTube thumbnails, that's typically VidIQ. For a free or lower-cost alternative, see our VidIQ alternatives guide.
2. TubeBuddy
TubeBuddy doesn't brand the metric as prominently, but its videolytics and competitor comparison tools surface equivalent view-velocity data so you can benchmark a video's pace against similar uploads.
3. YouTube Analytics Realtime Tab
YouTube Studio's Realtime card shows views in the last 48 hours, broken down hour by hour. While it doesn't display "VPH" as a single number, dividing the 24-hour total by 24 gives you the same answer. The hourly chart is also better for spotting acceleration or drop-off patterns within a launch.
4. Manual calculation
For a quick check, just divide a video's current view count by hours since upload. A spreadsheet pulling data via the YouTube Data API can automate this across your library.
VPH vs Related YouTube Metrics
VPH is closely related to several other YouTube metrics, but each one answers a slightly different question.
- VPH vs Velocity: Velocity is the broader concept of view acceleration. VPH is the numeric way to measure it.
- VPH vs CTR: CTR measures how many people click after seeing the thumbnail. VPH measures how many people end up watching per hour. High CTR with low VPH usually means low impression volume; low CTR with high VPH means YouTube is serving massive impressions to compensate.
- VPH vs Retention: Retention measures how long viewers stay. Two videos can have identical VPH but very different retention — and the one with higher retention will keep its VPH up longer.
- VPH vs Watch Time: Watch time is the long-term currency YouTube optimizes for. VPH is the short-term leading indicator that often predicts watch time totals.
- VPH vs Impressions: Impressions are how often your thumbnail was shown. VPH is the downstream result once those impressions convert.
What VPH Doesn't Tell You
Use VPH as a Signal, Not a Verdict
VPH is a great early-warning system, but it doesn't measure quality, profitability, or long-term value. Evergreen tutorials often have low first-week VPH but compound for years. Reaction or news videos can spike to 10,000+ VPH and then die in 72 hours. Pair VPH with retention, watch time, and subscribers gained to get a full picture of how a video is actually performing.
How to Improve Your VPH
Since VPH is downstream of velocity, the levers are mostly the same ones that drive any strong launch:
- Publish when your audience is active — concentrated early views compound faster
- Optimize the thumbnail and title for high CTR on initial impressions
- Hook viewers in the first 30 seconds to keep retention strong, which keeps the algorithm pushing
- Use Community Tab posts and notifications to drive subscriber-side traffic in the first hour
- Cross-promote from your latest videos via end screens and cards
- Study what made your previous high-VPH videos work and replicate the patterns
For a deeper look at how view velocity feeds into YouTube's ranking system, see our YouTube algorithm deep dive.
Looking for a VidIQ Alternative?
VidIQ owns the VPH metric — but it's not your only option. Compare free and paid tools that track view velocity.
See VidIQ Alternatives