Thumbnail Downloader for YouTube!
Paste a YouTube URL or 11-char video ID. Choose format & size, then download.
Preview
Format
How to Use our Thumbnail Grabber?
Use our free YouTube Thumbnail Downloader (Thumbnail Grabber) to quickly save video thumbnails in HD and 4K without watermarks. It supports both JPG and WEBP formats and works on desktop and mobile.
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Choose your YouTube video and copy its full URL
(for example:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VIDEO_ID) or just the 11-character video ID. - Open KlickPin Thumbnail Grabber in a new tab.
- Paste the URL/ID into the input box and click Get Thumbnails. Within seconds, you'll see an instant thumbnail preview with multiple sizes.
- By default, the tool selects the Max Resolution image (HD/4K when available). You can switch to other sizes if needed (e.g., Default, HQ, SD, HD, MaxRes).
- Choose your preferred format: JPG (widely compatible) or WEBP (modern & lightweight).
- Click Download to save the thumbnail instantly to your device.
Frequently Asked Questions:
Copy the URL from your browser's address bar on desktop, or in the YouTube app tap Share → Copy url on mobile.
Yes. It supports Shorts, live streams, and embedded videos.
Yes- you'll see an instant preview and can switch sizes (Default, MQ, HQ, SD, MaxRes) before you download.
All standard sizes are available. For best quality choose maxresdefault when present; otherwise pick hqdefault.
Static JPG/WebP thumbnail URLs are generally stable. If a specific size doesn't exist for a video, the server may return 404-try a different size.
Availability and quality depend on what the uploader provided. If a true HD/4K asset wasn't generated, YouTube may upscale a lower size.
Not guaranteed. MaxRes appears only if the original upload has that size; otherwise HQ/SD options are shown.
That size isn't available for that video. Pick another size (e.g., HQ or SD) and it will work.
KlickPin uses a CORS-safe download flow to trigger a direct download. If your browser still opens the image, use Save image as… after right-click/long-press.
Not at the moment. By default we use the YouTube video ID as the filename.