PDF download Download Article
Find deleted YouTube videos by link or ID
PDF download Download Article

Are you looking for ways to watch YouTube videos that were deleted? Depending on the video, you may be able to find it on the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine. You can also try other tricks like viewing the cached version of the video on Google and searching the web for the video's watch ID. This wikiHow article will teach you how you can watch deleted YouTube videos with the URL, name, and watch ID.

Things You Should Know

  • If the video was archived by the Wayback Machine before it was deleted, you can search for the URL there. [1]
  • Search Google using the video's watch ID (the part of the URL after watch?v= ) to see if it's viewable on social media posts and websites.
  • If someone reposted the video on another app, you may be able to find it by searching for its name or keywords.
Method 1
Method 1 of 4:

Using the Wayback Machine

PDF download Download Article
  1. If you have the URL or a link to the deleted video, you may be able to find it on the Wayback Machine. This will not work for most videos, but it may help you find the few that have been archived. There are a few different places you can look for the URL:
    • Your YouTube history.
    • Your liked videos .
    • Any playlist you've created or followed that contains the deleted video.
    • Messages on Facebook or through text that you either sent to a friend or yourself.
    • An older social media post on which you've shared the video .
    • Once you have the URL, copy it so you can paste it into the Wayback Machine.
  2. Go to https://archive.org/web in a web browser. The Wayback Machine will load. [2]
    Advertisement
  3. It's centered at the top of your screen.
    • A calendar will load that highlights every date the Wayback Machine archived that URL.
  4. Use the slider at the top of the page to see previous years.
  5. You'll be able to see the video before it was deleted.
    • If you can't find the video with the Wayback Machine, try using Time Travel at https://timetravel.mementoweb.org/ . This website also searches other archive sites, including Internet Archive, Archive-It, British Library, and Archive.today. [3]
  6. Advertisement
Method 2
Method 2 of 4:

Watching the Cached Version

PDF download Download Article
  1. Go to https://www.google.com in your web browser. If Google cached the YouTube video before it was deleted, you will still be able to watch the cached version. This won't work for videos that were deleted a long time ago or for private videos, but you may have some luck with more popular videos. [4]
  2. into the search field, followed by the video's URL. You can leave the "https://" out.
    • For example, if the URL is https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CpSewSHZhmo , type cache:www.youtube.com/watch?v=CpSewSHZhmo .
  3. If the video was cached by Google before deletion and the cache hasn't yet been updated, you can press the Play button to watch the video.
  4. Advertisement
Method 3
Method 3 of 4:

Searching by Watch ID

PDF download Download Article
  1. The YouTube video's watch ID is the part of the URL that comes after watch?v= .
    • For example, if the video URL is https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CpSewSHZhmo, the watch ID is CpSewSHZhmo .
  2. This can help you find social media posts, blog posts, and other websites that have shared or embedded the YouTube video before it was deleted.
  3. If you find a website or post that has shared the video, try clicking the Play button on the video to see if it will play.
  4. If you can't play the video, return to the Google search results, then try to view the cached version of the page that shared the video. To do this:
    • Click the three-dot menu on the right side of the link on the Google search page.
    • Click the down-arrow at the top-right corner of the "More options" window.
    • If available, click Cached . This won't be available for all pages.
    • If possible, click the play button on the video to watch it.
  5. Advertisement
Method 4
Method 4 of 4:

Searching by Name or Keyword

PDF download Download Article
  1. If you haven't been able to find the video by URL, you may be able to find it by name if it's been uploaded elsewhere. This will be especially useful for videos that were taken down by YouTube for copyright infringement or other reasons, as the creators may have shared them on other platforms.
    • If you don't know the video's name, try searching the web for its watch ID (the part of the URL after watch?v=). You may find that others have shared in social media or blog posts, which should lead you to the video's name.
  2. Search Google for the full name of the video. Surround the video's name in double quotation marks (e.g., "How to Play Poker" ) to make sure you only see results with the same name. [5]
    • You can also try searching for the video on TikTok , Instagram , and Facebook .
    • If this doesn't yield results, try removing the quotation marks. The original creator (or somebody who reposted it) may have slightly changed the name when sharing it on another site.
  3. If you still can't find the video, or you're not sure what it was called, you can also search for keywords from the video. This can be helpful for finding deleted videos that have gone viral in the past. For example, "cybergoths dancing outdoors" or "kid in car after dentist." [6]
  4. Advertisement

Expert Q&A

Ask a Question
      Advertisement

      Video

      Tips

      Submit a Tip
      All tip submissions are carefully reviewed before being published
      Name
      Please provide your name and last initial
      Thanks for submitting a tip for review!

      About This Article

      Article Summary X

      1. Get the URL to the deleted video.
      2. Go to https://archive.org/web/ in a web browser.
      3. Paste the deleted video's URL into the address bar and click Browse History .
      4. Navigate to a date when the video wasn't deleted.
      5. Click a date.

      Did this summary help you?
      Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 366,079 times.

      Is this article up to date?

      Advertisement