Free YouTube Influencer Search Tool

Find YouTube creators by content relevance and audience fit — not just subscriber count. Start free with 20 AI searches/month.

Link Detected: Content Lookalike Mode

We automatically infer niche, audience, region, and creator size from your description. No manual filters required.

Examples:

What this YouTube influencer search tool does

This YouTube influencer finder helps you discover creators based on what they actually talk about and who their audience is — like an influencer search engine powered by AI, not a static creator database.

Instead of browsing generic influencer marketplaces or filtering by subscriber count, this influencer discovery tool analyzes content patterns and audience signals to surface YouTube creators genuinely relevant to your product or campaign.

Why this tool doesn't use filters

Traditional influencer tools require manual filters like subscriber count, region, or category. These filters are rigid and often miss creators who are contextually relevant. Koog uses natural language understanding to interpret intent directly from your description.

You describe what you want.
The AI infers the rest.

How it works

1

Input

Input a description or paste a YouTube channel link you want to match.

2

Analyze

The system analyzes content topics, audience signals, language, and inferred region.

3

Rank

Creators are ranked by semantic relevance, audience fit, and commercial suitability.

When this tool is useful

When you want creators similar to an existing YouTube channel

When follower count matters less than audience relevance

When you're exploring a new niche and don't know how to filter

When you want to avoid generic influencer marketplaces

When you want to find YouTube micro-influencers (10K-100K subscribers) in a specific niche

When you need to find YouTube influencers in a specific region or language

Free Creator Analysis Tools

Looking for a specific channel?

If you already have a creator in mind, you can also use our similar influencer search.

Frequently asked questions

You don't need manual filters. Just include constraints in plain English (e.g. "under 200k subscribers", "US-based audience").