UN Tourism covers topics related to world tourism promoted by the United Nations, focusing on responsible, sustainable, and universally accessible travel. The channel leverages keywords such as World Tourism Organisation, UNWTO, Tourism, and United Nations, and its recent videos suggest a mix of talks, cultural sessions, and field features connected to the UNWTO/UNESCO World Conference on Tourism and Culture. Content appears to include interviews and discussions with professionals and organizations, with an average of around 1.3K views per video and an upload cadence of roughly 0.2 videos per week across 1,700 published pieces.
Similar Channels
We found 39 YouTube channels similar to UN Tourism
Shares audience around sustainable, community-driven, and heritage tourism topics (queries: sustainable tourism, community tourism, heritage tourism) with an 83% match; content similarity is 71%, indicating overlap in subject matter but differing in presentation style.
Targets sustainable, cultural, and eco tourism queries (queries: sustainable tourism, cultural tourism, eco tourism) with an 81% match and 74% content similarity, indicating relevant topics presented in a distinct personal/educational format.
sustainable tourismcultural tourismtourism development
Covers broad tourism concepts including sustainable and cultural tourism and development (queries: sustainable tourism, cultural tourism, tourism development) with a 57% match and high content similarity (74%), suggesting overlapping subject matter but simpler/explanatory style.
Aligns on the core idea of responsible travel (query: responsible travel) with a 56% match and strong content similarity (74%), indicating shared ethics-focused tourism content delivered in a different channel format.
cultural tourismheritage tourismtourism and culture
Centers on culture, heritage, and tourism intersections (queries: cultural tourism, heritage tourism, tourism and culture) at a 56% match with 74% content similarity, reflecting a governance/heritage angle rather than a pure tourism channel.
Focuses on sustainable and community tourism plus destination stewardship (queries: sustainable tourism, community tourism, destination stewardship) with a 56% match and 79% content similarity, indicating topic overlap but more policy/standardization emphasis.
Content Landscape
Top competitors by match strength are TEDx Talks (83% match) and Dr Hayley Stainton (81% match), both aligning on sustainable tourism, community/heritage tourism, and cultural topics. UNESCO (56% match) also overlaps on cultural tourism, heritage tourism, and tourism and culture, while What is tourism? (57% match) and Responsible Travel (56% match) share related queries like sustainable tourism and eco/cultural tourism. UN Tourism has 23.7K subscribers, far smaller than TEDx Talks (44.2M) and UNESCO (533K), but the overlap in queries such as sustainable tourism, cultural tourism, and heritage tourism groups them as direct competitors in search intent. Overall, the competitors cluster around cultural and sustainable tourism topics, with the top two by match and reach being TEDx Talks and Dr Hayley Stainton.
Which YouTube channels are most similar to UN Tourism?
TEDx Talks — 44.2M subscribers (83% match), Dr Hayley Stainton — 43.8K subscribers (81% match), What is tourism? — 5.9K subscribers (57% match). All three are YouTube channels focused on educational, informational, or topic-exploration content that targets knowledge-sharing audiences, similar to UN Tourism's World Tourism Organisation-related themes.
What type of content does UN Tourism make?
UN Tourism creates content about World Tourism Organisation topics, tourism culture and related themes, as evidenced by titles featuring the 3rd UNWTO/UNESCO World Conference on Tourism and Culture and other tourism-focused topics. Uploads average about 0.2 per week, with an average view count around 1.3K per video.
How do we determine which channels are similar to UN Tourism?
We analyze UN Tourism's recent videos, generate topic-relevant search queries, check YouTube search results, and compare the meaning of each channel's content to measure similarity. The result is a ranked list sorted by SERP overlap, semantic similarity, and search appearances.