March 21, 2026

How to Make a GIF from a YouTube Video

Four ways to turn a YouTube video into a GIF with free browser tools, URL tricks, and direct-import workflows, without installing software.

How to Make a GIF from a YouTube Video

You found a YouTube video with the exact moment you need: a product demo clip, a reaction, a tutorial step, or a visual example. You do not need the whole video. You need 3-8 seconds of it as a looping GIF.

YouTube does not let you export GIFs natively. So here are four ways to do it, ranked from most manual to least.


Method 1: Download the video first, then convert

This is the most common approach and the most steps.

Step 1: Download the YouTube video

You need a third-party downloader. A few that work:

  • yt1s.com: Paste the URL, choose MP4, download. Free, no signup.
  • cobalt.tools: Clean, open-source. Paste URL, download. No ads.
  • 4K Video Downloader: Desktop app. More reliable for long or high-res videos. Free tier available.

Paste the YouTube URL, pick a resolution (720p is usually fine for GIFs), download the MP4 to your computer.

Step 2: Convert the MP4 to GIF

Upload the downloaded file to a GIF converter:

  • EZGIF: Upload the MP4. Set the start and end timestamps. Choose frame rate (10-15 fps). Convert. Download the GIF.
  • CloudConvert: Upload, convert, download. Less trim control than EZGIF.

Step 3: Use the GIF

Insert it into your slide, doc, or message.

Total tools used: 2-3. Total time: 5-10 minutes. Files left on your hard drive: at least 2 (the MP4 and the GIF).


Method 2: Use Giphy's YouTube import

Giphy lets you paste a YouTube URL directly, no downloading required.

  1. Go to Giphy's GIF maker.
  2. Paste the YouTube URL.
  3. Choose the start point and duration (max 30 seconds, though shorter is better).
  4. Add captions or stickers if you want.
  5. Upload to Giphy. Download the GIF from your creation page.

Pros:

  • No separate download step.
  • Surprisingly simple interface.

Cons:

  • Requires a Giphy account.
  • Your GIF may be publicly visible on Giphy's platform (check privacy settings).
  • Limited trim precision.
  • Output quality is not always sharp: Giphy compresses aggressively.
  • Not great if the GIF is for a professional presentation.

Method 3: The "gifs.com" URL trick

This is the fastest free method if you just need a quick GIF and do not care about pixel-perfect quality.

  1. Go to the YouTube video in your browser.
  2. In the URL bar, add the word gif before youtube.com. So https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xyz becomes https://www.gifyoutube.com/watch?v=xyz.
  3. You will be redirected to gifs.com with the video loaded.
  4. Set your start and end points. Add text if you want.
  5. Create the GIF. Download it.

Pros:

  • No separate tool. Works directly from the YouTube URL.
  • Fast for quick, informal GIFs.

Cons:

  • gifs.com is ad-heavy.
  • Quality and resolution controls are limited.
  • The site can be unreliable; some videos fail to load.
  • Not ideal for professional or high-quality output.

Method 4: Import the URL directly into a GIF workflow tool

If the GIF is going into a specific destination, like a slide deck, some tools let you skip the download entirely.

Slidekick:

  1. Paste the YouTube URL (or many other video platforms) into the URL import field.
  2. The video loads in the built-in editor.
  3. Trim to the exact moment you need.
  4. Export as GIF or MP4.
  5. Send the GIF to Google Slides, or download the MP4 clip.

No separate downloader. No separate converter. No extra files.

This is most useful when the GIF is heading into a presentation and you want to skip the download-convert-upload loop.


Tips for making a good GIF from YouTube

Pick a short moment

A GIF works best at 3-8 seconds. Longer and the file gets huge, the loop gets tedious, and you probably should just link the video instead.

Choose the right resolution

You do not need 4K for a GIF. 480p or 720p is usually fine. Higher resolution equals larger file size for minimal visual benefit in GIF format.

Watch the file size

Aim to keep GIFs under 5-8 MB for slides and docs. If it is too large:

  • Shorten the clip.
  • Lower the frame rate to 10 fps.
  • Reduce the resolution.
  • Run it through EZGIF's GIF optimizer.

Quick comparison

MethodStepsQualityBest for
Download + EZGIF3High (you control settings)Precise GIFs, professional use
Giphy URL import2MediumQuick social/casual GIFs
gifs.com URL trick2Low-mediumFast informal GIFs
Slidekick URL import1HighGIFs going into Google Slides

Takeaway

You do not need to install software to make a GIF from a YouTube video. The right method depends on where the GIF is going and how much quality control you need.

For a quick reaction GIF, Giphy or gifs.com is fine. For a precise, professional clip, download and use EZGIF. For GIFs headed into presentations, a direct-import tool removes the most friction.


If you regularly pull clips from YouTube for Google Slides, Slidekick lets you paste the URL, trim the moment, export as GIF or MP4 — send GIFs to Google Slides or download MP4 clips, with no downloading or converting in between.

Get started with Slidekick

Import, trim, and export presentation clips as GIF or MP4 in one browser tab.

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