FoodStandardsAgency covers food safety, hygiene, and labeling topics for the UK audience, using titles that range from explanations of use-by and best-before dates to food hygiene ratings and how to trust food. Content appears in tutorials and explanatory formats, with shorts and longer videos addressing practical questions about dining out, allergies, and how food standards are applied. The channel publishes regularly, with an average of around 42.8K views per video across 394 uploads, indicating ongoing activity since joining Nov 22, 2006.
Similar Channels
We found 44 YouTube channels similar to FoodStandardsAgency
Both focus on food safety guidance, hygiene standards, and regulatory frameworks, with a high search overlap (food safety guidance, food hygiene standards) and strong content alignment (87% match overall).
food safety sciencefood safety regulationsfood safety at restaurants
They share emphasis on food safety science and regulations relevant to restaurants, reflected in solid search and content alignment (71% match) and overlapping queries like food safety regulations.
Similar audience seeking food safety guidance and hygiene standards, evidenced by high search (food safety guidance, hygiene ratings) and strong content overlap, though training express may differ in presentation style (64% match).
Shares focus on food safety science and regulations and mentions of hygiene standards, aligning in both search and content themes (57% match) despite a more academic/educational approach.
Overlaps on food labeling concepts like best before/use by dates, indicating some query commonality, but content diverges toward general education, reflected in a moderate overall match (56%).
risk communication foodrisk assessment methodscampylobacter control measures
Both address risk communication and assessment in food safety (campylobacter control measures), yielding solid alignment in search/content, notably higher content match (72%) but moderate overall (56%).
Content Landscape
Top competitors include U.S. Food and Drug Administration (71% match) and NSWFoodAuthority (87% match) as the closest matches, both sharing queries around food safety guidance, food safety regulations, and food hygiene standards. The FDA has substantially more subscribers (192K) than FoodStandardsAgency, while NSWFoodAuthority has 1.6K subscribers, indicating much smaller reach but strong overlap in core topics. The overlapping queries also include food safety science and food safety at restaurants, linking them to FoodStandardsAgency through similar regulatory and safety-focused content. Training Express (64% match, 13.8K subscribers) and The Culinary Institute of America (57% match, 229K subscribers) also compete on food safety guidance and hygiene-related topics, reinforcing a landscape where educational content on safety standards and hygiene practices is common across education-focused channels. TED-Ed (56% match, 22.4M subscribers) overlaps on food labeling dates and date-related queries, highlighting broader audience reach for date-related information.
Which YouTube channels are most similar to FoodStandardsAgency?
NSWFoodAuthority (87% match, 1.6K subscribers) and U.S. Food and Drug Administration (71% match, 192K subscribers) are the top competitors. Training Express (64% match, 13.8K subscribers) also appears as a competitor. All three share a focus on food safety, hygiene, and regulatory standards, aligning with FoodStandardsAgency's emphasis on food safety and hygiene.
What type of content does FoodStandardsAgency make?
FoodStandardsAgency creates educational content about food safety, hygiene, and standards, as seen in video titles like 'Use by vs best before dates', 'Food hygiene ratings. What's behind numbers?', and 'Thinking of eating out? Check the food hygiene rating'. The channel posts a variety of informative videos, with an average of about 42.8K views per video, and an implied upload frequency of multiple videos per week.
How do we determine which channels are similar to FoodStandardsAgency?
We analyze FoodStandardsAgency'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.