YouTube Trend Intelligence - Science & Technology - Monthly Report
Artificial intelligence dominates the Science & Technology category with a commanding 63.8 trend score, but smartphones, computer hardware, and gaming remain strong contenders. This month showcases the platform's split focus between AI breakthroughs and practical tech purchases.
Trending topics on YouTube in Science & Technology July 2026 show a category energized by major platform announcements, new hardware releases, and accelerating AI adoption. With 219 tracked topics and 3.8 million combined views across the top ten trends, this period reflects creators' and viewers' sustained interest in technology that impacts daily life. From artificial intelligence integration in consumer devices to next-generation gaming hardware, interest spans the full technology spectrum.
Artificial intelligence leads with a 63.8 trend score, propelled by major developer conferences and consumer-facing AI features in smartphones and desktop platforms. Beyond the AI headlines, however, content creators are finding steady audience engagement in granular topics: how to build custom PCs, smartphone comparisons, and deep dives into emerging displays and wearables. Viewers in this category clearly value both the big technological moments and the practical guidance on what to buy and build.
This report covers July 2026, comparing short-term momentum against the 60-day baseline to identify shifts in creator focus and viewer demand. Within Science & Technology, we see strong stability in core topics like artificial intelligence and computer hardware, while emerging areas like UFO-related content suggest viewers' fascination with unexplained phenomena and government transparency drives niche but passionate viewership.
Read our June 2026 Science & Technology report for comparison and context on how the category has evolved month-over-month.
How the Science & Technology trend score works
The trend score reflects both volume and velocity: a combination of video count, audience engagement, and momentum change relative to the baseline. Artificial intelligence scores 63.8, just 0.9 points higher than smartphone at 63.1. Yet AI content spans 99 videos while smartphones account for 27. This difference underscores how trend scores capture both the intensity of a topic and its breadth across creators. The score weights recent uploads more heavily, so a topic with sustained output across many creators scores higher than one with a few viral outliers.
Compare this to UFO content, which ranks 9th with 58.5 despite just 7 videos. UFO videos average 510k views each, revealing that niche, high-engagement content can punch above its weight in terms of algorithmic significance. Conversely, software ranks 10th with 57.2 but only 87.9k total views. This indicates a lower-performing topic that may be transitioning or consolidating under related category umbrellas.
Top 10 YouTube trending topics in Science & Technology - July 2026
| Rank | Topic | Trend Score | Videos | Views |
|---|
| 1 | artificial intelligence | 63.8 | 99 | 3.8M |
| 2 | smartphone | 63.1 | 27 | 2.9M |
| 3 | computer hardware | 62.7 | 50 | 4.9M |
| 4 | gaming | 61.7 | 42 | 1.4M |
| 5 | pc building | 61.5 | 31 | 974.3k |
| 6 | product reviews | 60.6 | 16 | 506.5k |
| 7 | software development | 60.2 | 31 | 977.2k |
| 8 | gadgets | 59.6 | 31 | 1.3M |
| 9 | ufo | 58.5 | 7 | 3.6M |
| 10 | software | 57.2 | 14 | 87.9k |
How this month compares with the 60-day Science & Technology trend baseline
Against the 60-day baseline, the 30-day picture shows notable shifts. Artificial intelligence dropped slightly in score (65.3 down to 63.8), yet its video count grew from 151 to 99 within the shorter window, suggesting increased creator focus on quality over quantity or a consolidation around major announcements. Computer hardware maintained strong momentum, rising one position in the ranking while its score stayed flat (63.4 vs. 62.7), indicating sustained viewer interest and reliable upload patterns.
Smartphone enters the top 2, a significant move from its 60-day absence in the top 10, signaling a breakthrough trend in the category. New entry product reviews ranks 6th at 60.6, reflecting creator response to new hardware launches mid-period. Several topics dropped from the 60-day baseline: productivity, communication, electronics, personal development, and online safety. These topics likely either consolidated under broader categories or saw reduced creator attention this month.
This pattern indicates the Science & Technology category is consolidating around hardware releases and AI integration stories, moving away from softer productivity and safety angles toward tangible products and emergent phenomena.
Explore all trending YouTube categories for cross-category insights on how Science & Technology topics compete on the wider YouTube platform.
Source: YouTube Trends publishes global search trends; this report focuses specifically on Science & Technology content trends, which reflect upload momentum and engagement patterns rather than search volume alone.
Deep analysis: artificial intelligence in Science & Technology
Artificial intelligence content in Science & Technology commands 3,818,723 views across 99 videos, averaging 38.6k per video. This volume reflects creators' response to Apple's WWDC, Google I/O, and other major announcements introducing consumer-facing AI features. The engagement rate of 3.74% and comment ratio of 0.24% indicate strong audience investment in understanding what these AI features mean for their devices and workflows.
Apple Intelligence emerged as a dominant frame. Multiple high-performing videos dissected Siri's new conversational interface, on-device processing benefits, and the risk of vendor lock-in through integrated services. Creators stressed that while Apple's AI capabilities are safe and privacy-focused, they also deepen dependence on Apple's ecosystem. This tension viewers found compelling. The strongest videos analyzed specific use cases: how AI helps writers draft content, how new on-device models differ from cloud-based competitors like ChatGPT and Gemini, and what existing iPhone owners should expect in the fall update rollout.
Google's AI announcements at I/O also featured prominently, with creators comparing Google's more aggressive agentic AI approach (which can take actions like buying concert tickets) against Apple's conservative model. This comparison resonated because it framed AI safety and control as differentiators, turning what could be a weakness into a selling point for Apple's approach. Viewers engaged in long comment threads debating which company's philosophy better matches their comfort level with AI autonomy.
Creator insight: Artificial intelligence content wins when it translates abstract technology into concrete user benefits and contextualizes new features within creators' existing platforms. Rather than treating AI as a standalone topic, tie each feature to a specific phone, computer, or app that viewers actually use.
Deep analysis: smartphone in Science & Technology
Smartphone content reaches 2,949,357 views across 27 videos, averaging 109.2k per video and achieving 2.79% engagement. This rapid rise reflects back-to-back smartphone announcements and mid-cycle refreshes that kept the category in headlines throughout June.
The highest-performing smartphone videos reviewed upcoming flagship launches and explored ecosystem decisions. Should buyers wait for the new model, or jump now? Creators also focused on folding smartphone durability, camera improvements, and whether flagship features justify the premium over mid-range options. One viral angle explored how AI integration differentiates this generation of phones. Apple's on-device processing, Google's Tensor specialization, and Samsung's Galaxy AI positioning became focal points for comparison.
Accessory content, including foldable cases and magnetic attachment solutions, also leveraged smartphone momentum. Creators documented how external devices like the Magic Screen (a magnetic touchscreen for MacBooks) could adapt existing hardware without waiting for official updates, appealing to viewers balancing budget constraints against the desire for new functionality.
Creator insight: Smartphone content performs best when it addresses immediate buying decisions and ecosystem trade-offs rather than pure specs. Focus on how a new phone integrates with the creator's broader setup, and compare alternatives at different price points to help viewers decide whether to upgrade.
The 3 videos defining Science & Technology this month
Apple's New AI Strategy: Safety Over Ambition
4.03M viewsTopic: artificial intelligence | Watch video
A deep analysis of Apple's WWDC keynote highlights the company's choice to run the most powerful AI models locally on-device rather than relying on cloud servers. The creator argues this approach prioritizes user privacy and device control but also shows Apple playing it 'extremely safe,' avoiding the more ambitious agentic features Google announced. Viewers responded to the tension between safety and capability, sparking hundreds of comments debating whether Apple's conservative stance protects users or limits innovation.
Adding a Touchscreen to Your MacBook: The Magic Screen Review
2.56M viewsTopic: smartphone | Watch video
This video demonstrates a magnetic external touchscreen that turns any MacBook into a dual-display setup with touch input. The creator explores the practical appeal: existing MacBook owners can gain tablet-like functionality without replacing their hardware. The video's success reflects viewer interest in extending device capabilities through creative accessories, especially as formal MacBook touchscreen models are rumored but not yet released. The accessory marketplace drives secondary conversations about practical workarounds.
Project Aura: Google and XREAL's New AR Glasses
7.6K viewsTopic: gadgets | Watch video
An exclusive first look at Project Aura shows lightweight AR glasses running Android XR, exploring the middle ground between full VR headsets and smart glasses. The creator highlights the modular design, where compute and optics can be upgraded independently, and the practical UI anchoring that lets users pin content to their vision while maintaining environmental awareness. This video exemplifies how emerging wearables attract creator attention and viewer curiosity when they solve real problems like comfort and multitasking.
What this means for Science & Technology creators
- Artificial intelligence content dominates engagement but thrives on specificity. Videos that tied Apple's new Siri to concrete workflows (writing, email management, photo editing) outperformed abstract explainers. Creators in this space should move beyond 'here's what the AI can do' toward 'here's how you'd actually use it.'
- Smartphone content benefits from comparison frameworks. The top performers didn't just review a single phone; they evaluated it against competing options, price tiers, and the viewer's existing device ecosystem. This pattern suggests audiences want decision-making guidance, not pure specs.
- Accessory and workaround content is underrated. The Magic Screen video, reviewing an external touchscreen for MacBooks, reached 2.56M views by addressing a gap between what people want (MacBook touchscreens) and what Apple ships. Creators can win by solving practical problems before official solutions arrive.
- Niche topics like UFO and government transparency content are building audiences at scale (510k average views despite only 7 videos). These audiences are highly engaged and passionate, suggesting opportunities for creators willing to go deeper into specialist subjects within Science & Technology.
- Comment-to-view ratios are highest on videos that present genuine tradeoffs or debates. Should you upgrade now or wait? Is privacy worth sacrificed power? Creators should embrace nuance and present multiple perspectives rather than advocating for a single choice.
What Science & Technology viewers are actually watching, and why
Viewers in Science & Technology watch content that helps them make purchasing decisions and understand how technology affects their lives. Artificial intelligence content resonates when it's tied to devices viewers already own or are considering buying. Smartphone content performs best when it addresses real questions: should I upgrade, and to which device? Accessory content thrives by filling gaps that official product lines have left open, appealing to viewers with specific needs and limited budgets.
The rise of smartphone content from outside the top 10 baseline to rank 2 reflects major announcements and refresh cycles, but also suggests sustained demand for comparison and buying guidance. Viewers want creators to validate their purchasing instincts or help them decide whether to wait. Niche topics like UFO content indicate strong communities of specialists and enthusiasts willing to engage deeply with creators who serve their interests with credibility and consistency.
Cross-category trends show viewers seeking practical utility: how to build, buy, customize, or understand technology that improves daily workflows. Creators who frame technology in terms of real-world benefit and honest tradeoffs attract both casual viewers and deeply engaged communities.