YouTube to Blog Draft
Turn a YouTube video transcript into a blog draft you can edit before publishing.
At a glance
Transkripe loads captions from a public YouTube video when available. The blog draft is created from transcript text, so you can compare the draft with the original wording and context.
Use it for webinars, interviews, tutorials and creator videos. Blog drafts may require Pro, and captionless videos may not work.
Use cases
Creators repurposing videos
Turn a long explanation into a first article draft for your website.
Marketers reviewing webinars
Create a recap draft from a product demo, interview or event recording.
Teachers sharing lessons
Convert a tutorial transcript into a written guide students can review.
Researchers writing summaries
Start from transcript text, then verify quotes and claims before publishing.
How it works
- Paste a public YouTube link.
- Transkripe loads the transcript when captions or subtitles are available.
- Create a blog draft, then edit structure, facts and style before publishing elsewhere.
Frequently asked questions
- What does YouTube to blog create?
- It creates a blog draft from transcript text taken from a captioned YouTube video.
- Does Transkripe publish the blog post?
- No. Transkripe creates text only. You publish manually in your own website or CMS.
- Does this work for every YouTube video?
- No. Transkripe works when the public video has captions or subtitles available. Private, restricted or captionless videos may not load.
- Is the blog draft free?
- Transcripts are free. Blog drafts may have daily limits, and some long-form outputs may require Pro.
- Should I edit the blog draft?
- Yes. Review the structure, facts, quotes and tone before publishing.
- Is Transkripe affiliated with YouTube?
- No. Transkripe is independent and is not affiliated with YouTube or Google.