YouTube Cards Strategy: How and When to Add Info Cards for More Views

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YouTube Cards Strategy: How and When to Add Info Cards for More Views

YouTube Cards Strategy: How and When to Add Info Cards for More Views

Here is something that surprised me when I first started digging into my card analytics: the YouTube info cards I had been placing at random timestamps were getting a click-through rate of barely 0.3 percent. But once I developed a proper placement strategy — timing cards to retention drop-off points and adding verbal call-outs — that number jumped to over 3 percent on some videos. That is a tenfold increase from the same feature, just used more intelligently.

Most creators treat YouTube cards as an afterthought. They finish uploading a video, quickly add a card or two linking to whatever their most recent upload happens to be, and never think about it again. That is leaving views on the table — potentially thousands of views per month that could be flowing from your existing content to your other videos, building the kind of session watch time that the YouTube algorithm rewards.

In my 20+ years as a content creator and as a YouTube Certified Expert who has audited hundreds of channels, I have seen firsthand how a strategic approach to info cards transforms a channel’s internal traffic flow. When I was on the vidIQ Creator Success team, we consistently found that channels with intentional card strategies had 15 to 25 percent higher session durations than channels that ignored cards entirely. That difference compounds over time, feeding the algorithm exactly the signals it uses to recommend your content more broadly.

In this guide, I am going to walk you through everything you need to know about YouTube cards — from the fundamentals of what each card type does, to the exact timing strategies that maximise clicks, to the analytics you should be monitoring. Whether you have never added a card to a video or you have been using them without much thought, this guide will give you a data-backed framework for turning cards into a genuine growth lever for your channel.

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What Are YouTube Info Cards?

YouTube info cards are interactive elements that creators can add to their videos to promote other videos, playlists, channels, or approved external links. They appear as a small circular teaser icon (the “i” symbol) in the top-right corner of the video player at a timestamp you choose. When a viewer clicks the icon, the card expands to reveal a clickable panel with a thumbnail, title, and custom message directing them to the linked content.

Each video can contain up to five info cards, each set to appear at a different timestamp. Unlike end screens, which only work in the final 5 to 20 seconds of a video, cards can be placed at any point throughout the entire duration. This makes them your primary tool for mid-video cross-promotion — catching viewers while they are actively engaged with your content rather than waiting until they are about to leave.

It is worth understanding the distinction clearly: end screens are your last-chance safety net at the close of a video, whilst cards are strategic signposts placed throughout the journey. Both are essential, and they work best when used together as part of a cohesive viewer navigation system.

Types of YouTube Cards (and When to Use Each)

YouTube currently offers three primary card types, each serving a different strategic purpose. Understanding when to use each one is the first step towards a proper cards strategy.

1. Video or Playlist Cards

These are the most commonly used and highest-performing card type. A video card links to another specific video on YouTube (ideally your own), whilst a playlist card links to a curated playlist. In my experience across hundreds of channel audits, video cards account for roughly 80 percent of all card clicks on most channels.

Use video cards when:

  • You mention a related topic that you have covered in another video
  • You want to direct viewers to a more detailed deep-dive on a subtopic
  • Your retention graph shows a drop-off point where a redirect could salvage the viewer
  • You reference a prerequisite concept that a viewer might need to understand first

Use playlist cards when:

  • Your video is part of a series and you want to direct viewers to the full playlist
  • You have multiple related videos on a topic and want to let the viewer choose
  • You are building a learning path or course-style sequence on your channel

2. Channel Cards

Channel cards promote another YouTube channel. These are less commonly used but valuable in specific situations — collaborations, shout-outs, or directing viewers to a second channel you own. In my consulting work, I generally recommend using channel cards sparingly because every click on a channel card sends a viewer away from your content.

Use channel cards when:

  • You are featuring or collaborating with another creator in the video
  • You have a second channel that covers a subtopic in more depth
  • You have a reciprocal promotion arrangement with another creator

3. Link Cards (Partner Programme Members Only)

Link cards allow you to direct viewers to approved external websites. This feature is only available to channels enrolled in the YouTube Partner Programme. Link cards are powerful for driving traffic to your website, merchandise store, crowdfunding page, or any associated website you have linked in YouTube Studio.

Use link cards when:

  • You want to drive traffic to your website, landing page, or online shop
  • You are promoting a course, product, or service relevant to the video topic
  • You reference a downloadable resource such as a template or checklist

Important Note

YouTube retired the older “annotation” system years ago and replaced it with info cards. If you see old advice referencing annotations, it is outdated. Cards are the current system and work across all devices including mobile, which now accounts for over 70 percent of YouTube watch time according to YouTube’s official blog.

Why YouTube Cards Matter More Than Most Creators Realise

Let me share something from my consulting experience that puts cards into perspective. I recently audited a channel with 150 videos and solid individual video performance, but their session watch time was poor. Viewers would watch one video and leave. The channel had almost no internal linking — no cards, inconsistent end screens, and no playlist strategy.

After implementing a systematic card strategy across their top 50 videos, their average session duration increased by 22 percent within six weeks. That meant each viewer was watching roughly 1.4 videos per session instead of 1.1. That might sound small, but across tens of thousands of monthly viewers, it translated to thousands of additional views per month — with zero new content required.

Here is why that matters for the algorithm:

  • Session watch time signals: YouTube tracks not just how long viewers watch a single video, but how long they stay on the platform after watching your video. Cards that send viewers to more of your content extend session time, which the algorithm interprets as a strong quality signal.
  • Content relationship mapping: When viewers consistently click from Video A to Video B via cards, YouTube learns that these videos are related. This improves how your content appears in “suggested videos” panels, which is the single largest traffic source for most channels.
  • Viewer loyalty indicators: High card engagement tells YouTube that your audience is actively interested in consuming more of your content. This builds the “fan” signals that YouTube uses to prioritise your videos in subscribers’ feeds and browse features.

To understand these algorithmic signals in detail, check out my full breakdown of YouTube analytics and every metric that matters in 2026.

How to Add YouTube Cards: Step-by-Step Guide

Adding cards is straightforward once you know where to find the feature in YouTube Studio. Here is the exact process:

Step 1: Open YouTube Studio and Select Your Video

Navigate to YouTube Studio, click on “Content” in the left-hand menu, and select the video you want to add cards to. You can add cards to both published videos and scheduled uploads.

Step 2: Open the Card Editor

In the video editor view, look for the cards icon — it resembles a small rectangle with an “i” in a circle. Click it to open the card editor. You will see your video timeline at the bottom, which is where you will position each card.

Step 3: Choose Your Card Type

Click “Add card” and select from the available types: Video, Playlist, Channel, or Link (if eligible). For most situations, you will want to select “Video” to promote another video on your channel.

Step 4: Select the Content to Promote

Search for or browse to the specific video, playlist, or channel you want to link. YouTube will show you a preview of how the card will appear. Choose content that is directly relevant to what the viewer is watching at the timestamp where you plan to place the card.

Step 5: Write Custom Teaser Text

Add a custom message that appears with the card teaser. This is your micro-pitch to the viewer. Keep it short, benefit-driven, and specific. Instead of “Check this out,” write something like “Full thumbnail tutorial here” or “See my 10-step SEO checklist.” The teaser text significantly impacts CTR.

Step 6: Set the Timestamp

Drag the card marker on the timeline to the exact timestamp where you want it to appear. I will cover the strategic timing in detail in the next section, but for now, aim for a moment where you naturally mention the related topic or where there is a content transition.

Step 7: Save and Repeat

Click “Save” to apply the card. Repeat the process for additional cards, spacing them out by at least 60 to 90 seconds to avoid overwhelming viewers. Remember, you can add up to five cards per video, but quality placement matters far more than quantity.

Pro Tip

You can add cards to videos that are already published without affecting their performance or resetting their metrics. This means you can go back and add strategic cards to your entire back catalogue — one of the highest-ROI activities you can do on a rainy afternoon. I recommend starting with your top 20 most-viewed videos.

YouTube Card Placement Timing: The Strategy That Maximises Clicks

This is where most creators go wrong, and where a proper strategy makes the biggest difference. Card placement is not about picking random timestamps — it is about understanding viewer psychology and using your retention data to place cards at the moments where they will have the greatest impact.

Here is the card timing framework I use with my consulting clients and that I developed during my time working with creators at vidIQ:

The Four Optimal Card Placement Zones

Zone 1: The Topic Transition (25-35% of video duration)

Your first card should appear around the quarter-to-third mark of your video, ideally at a natural topic transition. At this point, viewers who are engaged will stay, but those whose interest is waning might appreciate a redirect to something more specific to their needs. This is where a card linking to a deeper dive on a subtopic you just mentioned performs exceptionally well.

Example: In a video about YouTube SEO, at the 3-minute mark of a 10-minute video, you might say “I have covered thumbnails in depth in another video — click the card if you want the full thumbnail strategy.” This captures viewers who are specifically interested in thumbnails before their attention drifts.

Zone 2: The Retention Drop-Off Point (40-60% of video duration)

This is arguably the most powerful card placement zone. Open your audience retention graph in YouTube Studio and identify where the steepest drop-off occurs. Place a card just before that drop-off point — you are essentially offering viewers an escape route to more of your content rather than losing them to someone else’s video or off the platform entirely.

In my consulting work, I have found that cards placed at retention drop-off points achieve 1.5 to 2 times higher CTR than cards placed at arbitrary timestamps. The logic is simple: a viewer who is about to leave anyway has nothing to lose by clicking a card, but everything to gain for your channel metrics.

Zone 3: The Contextual Mention (Varies)

Whenever you verbally reference another piece of content — “as I explained in my video about playlists” or “if you have not set up your channel page yet, I have a guide on that” — place a card at that exact timestamp. These contextually triggered cards consistently achieve the highest CTR of any placement type because the viewer has just heard a reason to click.

In my own analytics, contextual cards with verbal call-outs average a 2.5 to 4 percent CTR, compared to 0.5 to 1 percent for cards placed without any verbal reference. That is a 3 to 5 times performance difference from simply saying “click the card” out loud.

Zone 4: The Pre-End-Screen Buffer (75-85% of video duration)

Place your final card well before your end screen kicks in. This creates a two-stage exit strategy: viewers who are starting to disengage in the final quarter get a card redirect, and those who make it to the very end get your end screen prompts. Do not place cards in the final 20 seconds — that space belongs to your end screen, and overlapping cards with end screens creates visual clutter and splits click attention.

Card Timing Quick Reference by Video Length

Video Length Recommended Cards Suggested Timestamps
5-7 minutes 1-2 cards 2:00, 4:00
8-12 minutes 2-3 cards 2:30, 5:00, 8:00
13-20 minutes 3-4 cards 3:00, 6:30, 10:00, 15:00
20-30 minutes 4-5 cards 4:00, 8:00, 14:00, 20:00, 25:00
30+ minutes 5 cards (maximum) 5:00, 12:00, 18:00, 24:00, 28:00

These are starting points — always adjust based on your specific video’s retention curve and content transitions. The timestamps above assume a video with fairly standard retention patterns. If your retention graph shows an unusual drop-off point, prioritise placing a card there regardless of what the general guideline says.

7 Best Practices for YouTube Cards That Actually Get Clicked

After analysing card performance across my own channels and hundreds of channels I have consulted on, here are the practices that consistently separate high-performing card strategies from wasted effort.

1. Always Use Verbal Call-Outs

This is the single most impactful thing you can do for card performance. When your card appears, say something about it. A simple “I have a full guide on this — click the card in the top right corner” increases CTR dramatically. In my testing, verbal call-outs boosted card clicks by 200 to 300 percent compared to silent cards.

The best verbal call-outs follow this formula: context + benefit + direction. For example: “I covered the full thumbnail design process in another video [context] — it has the exact templates I use for my own channel [benefit] — click the card in the top right to watch it [direction].”

2. Link Only Contextually Relevant Content

Never use cards to promote random or unrelated content. If someone is watching your video about YouTube SEO, a card linking to your video on camera equipment will feel jarring and get ignored. But a card linking to your YouTube SEO checklist or your guide to metadata optimisation feels like a natural next step.

The question to ask yourself for every card placement: “Would a viewer watching this exact moment genuinely want to see the video I am linking to?” If the answer is anything less than a strong yes, choose a different video or remove the card.

3. Write Specific, Benefit-Driven Teaser Text

Your card teaser text is a micro-headline. Treat it with the same care you would give a video title. Generic text like “Related video” or “Watch this” tells the viewer nothing about what they will gain by clicking. Specific text like “Get the free SEO template” or “See the full retention strategy” gives them a concrete reason to click.

Here are examples of weak versus strong teaser text:

Weak Teaser Text Strong Teaser Text
Check this out Full thumbnail design tutorial
Related video My 10-step SEO checklist (free)
Watch more See how I doubled my CTR
Click here Complete playlist strategy guide

4. Space Cards at Least 60-90 Seconds Apart

Placing multiple cards too close together overwhelms viewers and reduces the effectiveness of each individual card. Give each card at least 60 to 90 seconds of breathing room. If your video is only 8 minutes long and you want three cards, space them roughly 2.5 minutes apart — not clustered in the first half of the video.

5. Avoid the First 30 Seconds and Last 20 Seconds

The first 30 seconds of your video are critical for hooking the viewer. A card appearing during your hook competes with your ability to capture attention and can prematurely redirect viewers before they have decided to commit to your video. The last 20 seconds are reserved for your end screen elements, and placing cards there creates visual clutter and competing calls to action.

This creates a “safe zone” for cards that runs from approximately 0:30 to the 20-second-before-end mark. All your card placements should fall within this window.

6. Prioritise Your Own Content Over External Links

Unless you have a specific monetisation reason to use link cards (driving traffic to a product page, for instance), prioritise video and playlist cards that keep viewers within your channel ecosystem. Every click to an external site is a viewer who has left YouTube and may not return to your content during that session. Your primary goal with cards should be increasing internal navigation and session watch time.

7. Update Cards on Older Videos Regularly

Your card strategy should not be static. Every time you publish a new video, ask yourself: “Which of my existing videos should now have a card linking to this new video?” This creates a living, evolving web of internal links across your content library. I set a calendar reminder every month to review card placements on my top 20 most-viewed videos and update them with links to my latest relevant content.

Tools like vidIQ make this process significantly easier by helping you identify which of your videos are currently getting the most traffic and which new videos would benefit from that traffic being directed to them.

YouTube Card CTR Benchmarks: What Good Performance Looks Like

One of the most common questions I get in my consulting sessions is “what is a good card CTR?” Here are the benchmarks based on the data I have seen across hundreds of channels:

Card CTR Range Performance Level What It Means
Below 0.5% Poor Card is poorly timed, irrelevant, or not verbally referenced
0.5% – 1.5% Average Standard performance for passively placed cards
1.5% – 3% Good Well-timed card with relevant content and some verbal reference
3% – 5% Excellent Strong verbal call-out, perfectly relevant content, and ideal timing
Above 5% Exceptional Usually seen on highly targeted “how to” content with a clear next step

Keep in mind that card CTR also varies by device. Desktop viewers are more likely to click cards than mobile viewers because the card teaser is more visible on larger screens. Since mobile accounts for the majority of YouTube views, your overall card CTR will naturally be pulled lower by mobile traffic. This is normal and not a cause for concern as long as your desktop card CTR is healthy.

How to Track and Analyse YouTube Card Performance

You cannot improve what you do not measure. Here is how to access and interpret your card analytics in YouTube Studio.

Accessing Card Analytics

  1. Open YouTube Studio and navigate to Analytics
  2. Select the specific video you want to analyse
  3. Click on the “Engagement” tab
  4. Look for the “Interactive content” section, which covers both cards and end screens
  5. Here you will see card teaser impressions, card clicks, cards click-through rate, and performance by individual card

Key Metrics to Monitor

Card teaser impressions: The number of times the card teaser (the small “i” icon) was shown to viewers. This tells you how many viewers actually reached the timestamp where your card was placed. If impressions are low relative to total views, the card is placed too late in the video — most viewers have already dropped off before reaching it.

Card clicks: The number of viewers who clicked on the card to visit the linked content. This is the raw action metric and is directly influenced by your teaser text, verbal call-out, and the relevance of the linked content.

Card click-through rate: Card clicks divided by card teaser impressions, expressed as a percentage. This is your primary performance indicator. A rising CTR over time means your card strategy is improving; a declining CTR means something needs adjusting.

For a more comprehensive view of all your channel metrics and what they mean, read my full guide to YouTube analytics explained.

YouTube Cards and End Screens: How They Work Together

Cards and end screens are two halves of the same viewer navigation system. Understanding how they complement each other is critical for maximising your internal traffic flow.

Think of it this way:

  • Cards are the signposts placed along the road — they catch travellers at specific points of interest along the journey
  • End screens are the roundabout at the end of the road — they direct everyone who completed the journey towards their next destination

A common mistake is linking the same video in both a card and an end screen element within the same video. Whilst this is not harmful, it is a wasted opportunity. Instead, use cards to promote specific, contextually relevant videos at relevant moments, and use end screens to promote your best-performing or most recent content as a general next step.

Here is the integrated framework I recommend:

  1. Cards (throughout video): Link to specific videos that go deeper into subtopics you mention during the video. These are targeted, contextual redirects.
  2. End screen — Video element: Link to your “best for viewer” content (let YouTube’s algorithm choose) or a specific high-performing video. This is a broad redirect.
  3. End screen — Subscribe element: Always include a subscribe prompt for viewers who watched to the end but are not yet subscribed.
  4. End screen — Playlist element: Link to a relevant playlist to encourage binge-watching sessions.

Advanced Card Strategies for Maximum Channel Growth

Once you have mastered the basics, these advanced strategies can take your card performance to the next level.

Strategy 1: The Content Web Approach

Instead of thinking about cards video-by-video, think about them as a web of interconnected content. Map out the logical pathways between your videos — which video naturally leads to which other video? Then use cards to create those pathways explicitly. The goal is that a viewer who starts on any video in your library can navigate through cards to find the exact content they need, staying within your channel ecosystem the entire time.

This is essentially building internal linking for your YouTube channel, following the same principles that work for website SEO. When I was working with the vidIQ team, we saw that channels with strong internal linking via cards and playlists grew significantly faster than channels that treated each video as a standalone piece of content.

Strategy 2: The Funnel Card Sequence

If your channel has a clear viewer journey — from awareness to consideration to conversion — use cards to move viewers along that funnel. For example, an introductory “what is” video might have a card linking to a deeper “how to” tutorial, which in turn has a card linking to an advanced strategy video that promotes your paid product or service.

This structured approach to card placement transforms your YouTube channel from a collection of videos into a strategic content funnel. I use this exact approach for my own channel and recommend it to every business channel I consult with.

Strategy 3: Data-Driven Card Optimisation

Use vidIQ’s analytics tools alongside YouTube Studio to identify which of your videos have the highest traffic potential for receiving card clicks. Look for videos with high impression counts but low session continuation — these are the videos where viewers are most likely to leave your channel after watching. Adding well-placed cards to these videos can capture departing viewers and redirect them to more content.

Similarly, identify your “gateway” videos — the ones that most new viewers discover first. These videos should have the most carefully crafted card strategies because they are your first opportunity to convert a casual viewer into a multi-video session.

Strategy 4: Seasonal Card Rotation

Some of your content will be seasonal — year-end reviews, holiday-specific videos, or trend-based content. When these seasonal videos start receiving increased traffic, update the cards on them to link to your most current and relevant content. A video about “YouTube Strategy for 2025” that starts getting traffic again in late 2025 should have its cards updated to link to your 2026 content.

Key Takeaway

YouTube cards are not a “set and forget” feature. The most successful channels treat cards as a dynamic system that gets reviewed and updated regularly. Schedule a monthly card review session where you update your top-performing videos with cards linking to your latest relevant content. This single habit can generate hundreds or even thousands of additional monthly views at no extra production cost.

Common YouTube Card Mistakes to Avoid

In my consulting audits, I see the same card mistakes repeatedly. Here are the most common ones and how to fix them.

Mistake 1: Not Using Cards at All

This is by far the most common mistake. A shocking number of channels — including channels with tens of thousands of subscribers — have zero cards on their videos. They are essentially relying entirely on end screens and YouTube’s organic suggested video algorithm to keep viewers watching. By not using cards, they are leaving their internal traffic flow entirely in YouTube’s hands rather than guiding it themselves.

Mistake 2: Using All Five Cards on Short Videos

Stuffing five cards into a 6-minute video means a card is appearing roughly every minute. This creates “card fatigue” — viewers start ignoring the teaser icon because it appears so frequently. For shorter videos, less is more. Two well-placed cards will outperform five poorly spaced ones every time.

Mistake 3: Always Linking to Your Most Recent Video

Many creators default to linking every card to their latest upload, regardless of whether it is relevant to the video the viewer is currently watching. This might drive a small number of clicks from loyal subscribers who want to see everything you publish, but it misses the much larger opportunity of contextual relevance. A viewer watching your SEO tutorial does not care about your latest vlog — they want more SEO content.

Mistake 4: Placing Cards During High-Engagement Moments

If your retention graph shows a peak or plateau — meaning viewers are highly engaged at that moment — do not place a card there. You would be interrupting a moment where the viewer is fully invested in your content. Save card placements for transition points and early-stage drop-offs where a redirect is genuinely helpful rather than disruptive.

Mistake 5: Ignoring Card Analytics

Adding cards without ever checking their performance means you never learn what works for your specific audience. YouTube provides detailed card analytics — use them. Review your card CTR at least monthly, identify which placements and card types perform best, and apply those lessons to future videos. Refer to the YouTube Help Center’s guide on interactive content for details on accessing these metrics.

YouTube Cards on Mobile: What You Need to Know

With over 70 percent of YouTube watch time now happening on mobile devices, understanding how cards behave on mobile is essential. The good news is that YouTube cards work on all devices — unlike the old annotation system they replaced, which was desktop-only.

However, there are some important differences in how cards appear on mobile versus desktop:

  • Smaller teaser icon: The card teaser is less prominent on mobile screens, making verbal call-outs even more important for mobile viewers
  • Tap target size: The clickable area is smaller on mobile, which naturally reduces mobile card CTR compared to desktop
  • Landscape versus portrait: Cards are only visible when the viewer is watching in the standard YouTube player view. If they are watching in full-screen mode, the card teaser may be less noticeable
  • No cards on Shorts: Cards cannot be added to YouTube Shorts, which are a mobile-first format. For Shorts cross-promotion, use pinned comments instead

The key takeaway for mobile is that verbal call-outs become even more critical. On mobile, a viewer might not notice the small card teaser icon, but they will hear you say “click the card in the top right.” Your voice becomes the primary discovery mechanism for your cards on mobile devices.

Building Your YouTube Card Strategy: A Complete Checklist

Here is the complete checklist I use with my consulting clients to implement a card strategy across their channel. You can follow this same process for your own channel.

Phase 1: Audit Your Existing Videos (Week 1)

  1. List your top 20 most-viewed videos using YouTube Studio or vidIQ
  2. Check each video for existing cards — note how many cards each has and what they link to
  3. Review the audience retention graph for each video to identify optimal card placement points
  4. Map the topical relationships between your videos — which videos are related to which

Phase 2: Add Cards to Your Back Catalogue (Weeks 2-3)

  1. Add 2 to 3 contextually relevant cards to each of your top 20 videos
  2. Place cards at retention drop-off points and topic transition moments
  3. Write specific, benefit-driven teaser text for every card
  4. Work through the rest of your catalogue in batches of 10 videos per session

Phase 3: Build Cards Into Your Production Workflow (Ongoing)

  1. During scripting, identify points where you will reference other content and plan verbal card call-outs
  2. After uploading, add cards before scheduling the video to go live
  3. When publishing a new video, update cards on 3 to 5 existing related videos to link to the new content
  4. Monthly, review your card analytics across your top-performing videos and optimise underperforming placements

What You Can Expect

Channels that implement this complete card strategy typically see a 10 to 25 percent increase in average views per session within the first two months. The compounding effect of better session watch time also improves algorithmic recommendations over time, creating a virtuous cycle of growth. I have seen these results consistently across the channels I have consulted with — from small channels with a few hundred subscribers to established brands with six-figure audiences.

Ready to Take Your Channel to the Next Level?

Get the tools AND the expertise. Try vidIQ for data-driven growth, or book a 1-on-1 call with me for a personalised strategy that covers cards, end screens, playlists, and every other growth lever.

Frequently Asked Questions About YouTube Cards

What are YouTube info cards?

YouTube info cards are interactive elements that creators can add to their videos to promote other videos, playlists, channels, or external links. They appear as a small teaser icon in the top-right corner of the video player at a timestamp you choose, and when clicked, expand to show the full card with a clickable link. Each video can have up to five info cards placed at specific timestamps throughout the video.

How many YouTube cards can I add per video?

YouTube allows a maximum of five info cards per video. However, using all five is not always advisable. For videos under ten minutes, two to three well-placed cards typically perform better than five competing for attention. For longer videos of fifteen minutes or more, four to five cards can work well as long as they are spaced out appropriately and each one is contextually relevant to what the viewer is watching at that timestamp.

When is the best time to place YouTube cards in a video?

The best time to place YouTube cards is during natural transition points in your video, moments when you verbally reference related content, and at the point where your audience retention graph shows viewers starting to drop off. Avoid placing cards in the first thirty seconds when viewers are still deciding whether to stay, and avoid the final twenty seconds which are reserved for end screens. The highest-performing card placements are typically between the 30-percent and 70-percent mark of your video’s total duration.

What is a good click-through rate for YouTube cards?

A good click-through rate for YouTube cards is between 1 and 3 percent. The average across most channels is around 0.5 to 1.5 percent. Cards that are verbally called out by the creator and contextually relevant to the current topic tend to achieve 2 to 5 percent CTR. If your card CTR is below 0.5 percent, the card is likely poorly timed, irrelevant to the viewer’s intent, or not being mentioned in your verbal delivery.

Do YouTube cards hurt audience retention?

YouTube cards can reduce retention on the current video if a viewer clicks away to watch the linked content. However, this is not necessarily negative because the viewer is staying within your channel ecosystem rather than leaving YouTube entirely. YouTube’s algorithm considers session watch time across your channel, so a viewer who clicks a card to watch another of your videos is still contributing to your overall channel performance. The key is strategic placement so cards do not interrupt high-engagement moments.

Can I add YouTube cards to Shorts?

No, YouTube info cards cannot be added to YouTube Shorts. Cards are only available for standard long-form videos and live streams. For Shorts, your primary navigation tools are pinned comments with links and your channel page. If you want to direct Shorts viewers to longer content, use a verbal call to action telling them to check the pinned comment or visit your channel page.

What types of YouTube cards are available?

YouTube currently offers three main types of info cards: video or playlist cards that link to other YouTube content, channel cards that promote another YouTube channel, and link cards that direct viewers to approved external websites. Link cards are only available to channels in the YouTube Partner Programme. The most commonly used and highest-performing type is the video card, which links viewers to another specific video on your channel.

Should I use YouTube cards or end screens?

Use both — they serve different purposes and complement each other. Cards work throughout the body of your video to catch viewers at relevant moments and redirect them to related content. End screens occupy the final five to twenty seconds and serve as a last-chance prompt for viewers who watched to the end. A strong strategy uses cards during the video for contextual cross-promotion and end screens at the close for broader channel navigation.

How do I see YouTube card analytics?

You can view YouTube card analytics in YouTube Studio by navigating to Analytics, then selecting the specific video, and looking at the interactive content section. This shows you card teaser impressions, card clicks, click-through rate, and which specific cards are performing best. You can also compare card performance across videos to identify which placement strategies and card types drive the most engagement on your channel.

Do YouTube cards affect the algorithm?

YouTube cards do not directly influence the recommendation algorithm. However, they indirectly affect it by increasing session watch time when viewers click through to watch more of your content. A viewer who clicks a card and watches another video signals to the algorithm that your content is engaging and worth recommending. Cards also help YouTube understand the topical relationships between your videos, which can improve how your content is suggested alongside related videos.

Final Thoughts: YouTube Cards Are a Free Growth Lever — Use Them

YouTube cards are one of the few completely free features on the platform that can directly increase your views, session watch time, and algorithmic performance — yet most creators either ignore them entirely or use them without any strategy. That gap between what cards can do and how most channels actually use them represents a genuine competitive advantage for creators willing to invest a few hours in implementing a proper card strategy.

In my 20+ years of creating content and hundreds of channel audits as a YouTube Certified Expert, I have consistently seen that the channels which treat viewer navigation as a system — using cards, end screens, and playlists together — outgrow channels that leave navigation to chance. It is not the most glamorous aspect of YouTube strategy, but it is one of the most reliably effective.

Start with your top 20 videos. Review their retention graphs. Add two to three strategically placed cards to each one. Write compelling teaser text. Then track the results. I am confident you will see the difference within weeks.

And if you want help implementing a comprehensive channel optimisation strategy that covers cards, end screens, playlists, metadata, and every other technical lever, book a free discovery call and let us look at your channel together.

About the Author — Alan Spicer

Alan Spicer is a YouTube Certified Expert and 20+ year content creator with 6 Silver Play Buttons. A former vidIQ team member and certified YouTube consultant, Alan has helped hundreds of creators and businesses grow their channels through expert audits, coaching, and data-driven strategy. Learn more about Alan’s consulting services or book a free discovery call.


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By Alan Spicer - YouTube Certified Expert

UK Based - YouTube Certified Expert Alan Spicer is a YouTube and Social Media consultant with over 2 Decades of knowledge within web design, community building, content creation and YouTube channel building.

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