YouTube test replaces video titles with AI summaries

Google is testing AI-generated summaries in YouTube feeds, replacing video titles with auto-written synopses.
Some YouTube users are seeing video titles replaced by AI-generated summaries in the Android app. Reports on Reddit showed title-less video cards with collapsible summary boxes instead.
The details. Video thumbnails remain, but titles are missing in some cases.
- AI summaries appear in expandable text boxes beneath each video.
- Users must tap to expand summaries to understand the content.
- The test appears limited to YouTube on Android.
What it looks like. Here’s a screenshot Reddit user GrimmOConnor shared:

Why we care. This further abstracts creator metadata and reduces control over how your YouTube content appears. Titles remain a critical ranking and click-through signal. Replacing them with AI summaries can impact keyword targeting, brand voice, and intent matching — and increase the risk of inaccuracies that hurt performance.
The context. Google is also testing AI-generated headline rewrites in Search, extending the same approach beyond Discover and now potentially into YouTube.
- Google confirmed a “small” and “narrow” experiment replacing original page titles with AI-generated versions in Search results.
- According to Google, the goal is to better match queries and improve engagement.
- But examples showed Google shortening or rewording headlines, changing tone and meaning.
Reaction. Early feedback suggests a worse browsing experience. Expanding summaries slows discovery and adds friction to content selection, which runs counter to YouTube’s engagement goals.
What’s next. There’s no official confirmation from YouTube on a broader rollout. The missing titles may be a bug, but the AI summary feature aligns with Google’s broader push into generative AI.
First seen. We learned about this test from Android Authority.






