Carwow is run by Mat Watson, a former motoring journalist, and has become one of the most watched car channels in the world with over 11 million subscribers. The channel's signature format is the drag race โ a straight-line acceleration test between two or more cars that serves as both a genuine performance benchmark and genuinely entertaining television. Beyond drag races, Carwow covers in-depth car reviews, head-to-head comparisons and a rolling programme of new model assessments. Their production quality is high, their racing locations are often spectacular, and the combination of Koenigseggs, Bugattis and family SUVs on the same strip has become a reliable format for delivering extraordinary viewing numbers.
Doug DeMuro is an American writer and YouTuber who has built 5.1 million subscribers around a single, unapologetically nerdy format: go through every single feature and quirk of a car โ every button, hidden compartment, unusual design decision and overlooked detail โ before driving it and assigning it a numerical DougScore. His reviews run 25 to 35 minutes and cover everything from a base-spec Toyota to a $3 million hypercar with the same level of methodical, good-humoured attention. Doug has been credited with creating a new style of car reviewing that influenced an entire generation of automotive YouTubers. The Cars & Bids auction platform he founded has become a significant business alongside the channel.
Top Gear is the BBC's official YouTube home for the long-running television programme, one of the most watched factual shows in the world. The channel hosts clips, full episodes and behind-the-scenes content from more than 30 years of the show โ from the iconic Clarkson, Hammond and May era through to the current presenting lineup. The Star in a Reasonably Priced Car segment, the Power Lap lap times, the extended road trips and the set-piece challenges have all become part of automotive culture. With over 9 million subscribers and decades of archive content, the Top Gear channel is one of the definitive references for car television on YouTube.
Donut Media is an American car channel that built its audience on a simple but effective idea: car history is genuinely interesting and doesn't have to be presented like a university lecture. Their Up to Speed series โ fast-paced, enthusiastic, often funny deep dives into the history of a specific car model, brand or motorsport phenomenon โ covers everything from the Dodge Demon to the Skyline GT-R to Ken Block. Their Money Pit series documents the chaotic, honest and often expensive reality of buying and modifying a cheap sports car. With 9.2 million subscribers and content that ranges from genuinely educational to completely ridiculous, Donut is one of the most entertaining car channels on YouTube.
ChrisFix is an anonymous American car enthusiast โ he has never shown his face on camera in over a decade of making YouTube videos โ who has built 10 million subscribers by teaching people how to fix, clean and maintain their own cars. His tutorials cover everything from changing brake pads and replacing a timing belt to detailing a car to a professional standard using household products. The format is always the same: methodical, step-by-step, filmed from above the car so viewers can see exactly what he is doing, with clear narration and no unnecessary complexity. ChrisFix is widely considered the best entry point on YouTube for anyone who wants to start working on their own car.
Jason Fenske is a mechanical engineer from North Carolina who has spent more than a decade patiently answering the question that every car enthusiast eventually asks: how does this actually work? His channel covers turbochargers, transmissions, suspension geometry, brake bias, engine cooling, EV range, aerodynamics and every other technical topic that sits underneath the surface of automotive performance โ explained clearly, accurately and without condescension, usually with a whiteboard and a great deal of genuine enthusiasm. Engineering Explained has 3.7 million subscribers and is widely considered the most technically rigorous free automotive education resource on YouTube.
Throttle House is run by two Canadian automotive journalists โ Thomas Holland and James Engelsman โ who have built 2.4 million subscribers with a genuinely enjoyable approach to car reviewing that prioritises real-world testing, clear opinions and a good rapport between two people who clearly enjoy what they do. Their reviews cover sports cars, SUVs, everyday vehicles and high-performance machines, always with both track and road testing. What distinguishes Throttle House from the field is their editorial credibility โ both Thomas and James have professional journalism backgrounds โ combined with a warmth and wit that makes long-form car reviews feel like something worth watching for its own sake rather than just a purchasing guide.
Jay Leno's Garage is the YouTube channel of American comedian, former Tonight Show host and lifelong car collector Jay Leno, who has assembled one of the most remarkable private automobile collections in the world โ more than 180 cars and 160 motorcycles spanning over a century of automotive history. His channel gives viewers access to that collection: walkarounds, drives, restoration updates and interviews with owners and engineers, all presented with Leno's considerable charm and genuine depth of knowledge about automotive history. The channel is remarkable for the breadth and quality of cars involved โ from an original Ford Model T through to prototype hypercars โ and for the access Leno's position gives him to vehicles that most people will only ever see in a museum.