TS TubeSnaps

Measure thumbnail availability

YouTube Thumbnail Size Checker

Check maxresdefault, SD, HQ, MQ, and default thumbnail candidates with actual browser-detected dimensions.

Try:

Direct answer

The YouTube Thumbnail Size Checker loads common thumbnail candidates in your browser and reports actual dimensions, availability, aspect ratio, and fallback guidance for each candidate.

Detailed guide

Check the real image size, not just the filename

A thumbnail URL can look like a high-resolution file even when the image that loads is smaller, missing, or placeholder-like. That is why TubeSnaps checks the actual natural width and height in the browser instead of relying only on the filename.

This page is most useful when maxresdefault is not working, when an image looks blurry, or when you need to decide whether sddefault, hqdefault, mqdefault, or default is a safer fallback.

The size checker does not call the YouTube API or guarantee a specific asset exists. It shows what your browser can load from common public candidates and gives a practical explanation of the result.

How it works

Measure thumbnail candidates before you reuse them

The size checker is a diagnostic workflow: compare expected filenames with the dimensions your browser can actually load.

  1. 1

    Enter a video URL or ID

    TubeSnaps extracts the video ID from common YouTube URL formats or accepts a bare 11-character ID.

  2. 2

    Load thumbnail candidates

    The browser checks common public image URLs such as maxresdefault, sddefault, hqdefault, mqdefault, and default.

  3. 3

    Compare actual dimensions

    TubeSnaps reads natural width and height where possible instead of relying only on expected dimensions.

  4. 4

    Choose a fallback

    If maxresdefault is missing or suspicious, use the recommended lower-size candidate.

Visual explainer

Thumbnail size ladder

Move from the largest useful candidate down to reliable smaller fallbacks when a video does not expose every size.

maxresdefault

Usually 1280 x 720 when available.

sddefault

Often 640 x 480 and useful as a larger fallback.

hqdefault

Common 480 x 360 fallback.

mq/default

Smaller references for quick previews.

Sizes and formats

Thumbnail size reference and fallback meaning

Use actual dimensions to separate strong candidates from small fallbacks or missing assets.

ItemSize or valueFormatBest useNote
maxresdefaultExpected around 1280 x 720JPGBest large 16:9 candidateMay be unavailable or suspiciously small.
sddefaultOften 640 x 480JPGLarge fallbackGood when maxres does not load.
hqdefaultOften 480 x 360JPGReliable fallbackUsually enough for small previews.
mqdefaultOften 320 x 180JPGLightweight previewUseful for quick references.
defaultOften 120 x 90JPGTiny fallbackAvoid for polished design work.

Image examples

What the image candidates can mean

Expected HD

A loaded 1280 x 720 candidate usually works for creator image previews and blog use.

Small fallback

A 120 x 90 result means the image is only useful as a tiny reference, not a production asset.

Suspicious result

A large filename returning a small image should be treated as a fallback signal.

Design and usage tips

Use thumbnails with clearer judgment

Use dimensions as a quality gate

Do not choose a thumbnail just because the filename says maxres; confirm the loaded size.

Match the image to the use case

Large previews need stronger candidates, while small notes can use lighter fallback images.

Prefer reliable over broken

A smaller available image is better than embedding a missing or placeholder-like high-resolution URL.

Popular use cases

When this workflow helps

Diagnose blurry thumbnails

Check whether the loaded image is smaller than expected before using it in a design or article.

Fix maxres issues

Confirm whether maxresdefault is truly available, missing, or placeholder-like.

Pick an embed image

Choose a practical fallback for pages, previews, or documentation.

What the results mean

Read the output with confidence

Actual size

The width and height reported by the browser after loading the image.

Expected size

The common target dimension for that filename, used only as a reference.

Placeholder suspected

A large filename may return a small image, which usually means a better fallback is needed.

Aspect ratio

A quick way to spot whether a candidate matches a 16:9 thumbnail workflow or a smaller generated preview.

Common mistakes

Avoid misleading thumbnail workflows

Trusting the filename only

A URL containing maxresdefault does not prove the loaded image is actually 1280 x 720.

Using a failed image in production

If a candidate is unavailable, choose a fallback instead of embedding the missing URL.

Ignoring generated preview limits

0.jpg, 1.jpg, 2.jpg, and 3.jpg can be useful but may not represent the custom thumbnail.

Trust and compliance

Local-first, permission-aware guidance

No YouTube API dependency

The current checker reads public image candidates and browser-detected dimensions.

No stored URLs

The tool is designed to avoid storing full YouTube URLs or user search history.

Transparent fallback logic

The result text explains why a fallback may be safer than the largest-looking filename.

Official context

Sources and platform context

Related workflows

Next steps after this page

Related tools

Keep working with this video

FAQ

Common questions

Why does maxresdefault sometimes return a small image?

A missing high-resolution asset can resolve to a fallback-like placeholder. TubeSnaps marks suspicious small dimensions so you can choose a better fallback.

What fallback order should I try?

Try maxresdefault, sddefault, hqdefault, mqdefault, then default.

Does this use the YouTube API?

No. The first version checks public image candidates in the browser and reads natural image dimensions.