YouTubers for school-age kids (7+)
Creators with a 7+ age recommendation — channels CheckerAI rated as appropriate for early- and middle-school children. Typically light kid-gaming channels, fun challenges, stories, educational content and animations with more developed plots. Each creator has a full report.
- 12/100 · safeFuzzyAge: 7+
This creator posts short baseball highlight clips, reactions, and sports moments centered on MLB-style content. The overall tone looks energetic and sports-focused, which can be fun for kids who like baseball. The good news is that the provided transcripts do not show explicit sexual content, drug references, hate speech, or dangerous behavior. The main concerns are mild: some titles use prank or hype framing like "messing with teammates.." and "OMG..," and sports clips can include fast action that very young children may imitate without context. There is also some clickbait-style presentation in several shorts, which is not harmful by itself but can encourage sensational viewing habits. Overall, this looks mostly family-safe, with light supervision recommended for younger children.
- 18/100 · safeNBAAge: 7+
This is the official NBA channel, focused on basketball highlights, recaps, interviews, and short celebratory clips. The good news is that it appears professionally produced and there are no signs of sexual content, drugs, hate speech, or predatory behavior. The main concerns are mild sports intensity, competitive trash talk, and brief injury discussion in the available transcript, including phrases like "be aggressive" and "I let him hear it a little bit," which younger kids may copy without understanding the sports context. Some thumbnails and shorts use hype-driven language and emojis, including a suggestive-looking hot-face emoji in one short title, but nothing here appears explicitly sexual. For most school-age children, this looks generally fine if they already watch sports and understand competitive behavior. I would recommend it for ages 7+ with light parental awareness for very young children who may imitate the attitude or roughness of pro sports. ⚠️ Uwaga: Napisy pobrano tylko z 1 z 10 filmów. Ocena może być niepełna.
- 18/100 · safeRBTAge: 7+
This creator makes short sports and sports-gaming videos focused on NFL players, Madden team-building, and football reactions. The overall tone is energetic and playful, and there is no sign of sexual material, drug references, hate speech, or predatory behavior. What is good is that the content stays centered on football, game strategy, and fan reactions, which many kids interested in sports would likely enjoy. The main concerns are mild rough-sports framing and injury-related humor, especially "I'm attempting to score the world's first 99-yard touchdown with a broken leg" at [0:00], which could normalize playing through injury in a silly way. There is also a little mild language and mocking commentary, such as "the most diabolical decisions I've ever seen" at [0:31] and "the first sign of intelligence we have seen all day" at [0:22]. I would consider this generally okay for school-age kids with light supervision, but not ideal for the youngest viewers who may imitate the injury joke or absorb the snarky tone.
- 19/100 · safeSciShow KidsAge: 7+
SciShow Kids is a science education channel made for young children, with friendly hosts, simple explanations, and lots of curiosity-driven learning. The content is mostly very positive: it teaches earth science, animals, weather, fossils, and geography in a calm, classroom-style format. The main concern is that several videos use dramatic natural-disaster examples, especially volcanoes, with phrases like "KABOOM," hot lava, ash clouds, and people needing to evacuate, which may feel intense for very sensitive kids. One video also discusses wolves being killed in Yellowstone and animals starving after ecosystem changes, but it stays educational and non-graphic. There is no sexual content, hate speech, drug content, or dangerous imitation behavior in the material provided. For most children this looks appropriate and enriching, but parents of very young or anxious viewers may want to preview the volcano and storm episodes first.
- 19/100 · safeJeb BrooksAge: 7+
This creator makes polished travel videos focused on flights, airports, lounges, and airline comparisons around the world. The overall tone is informative and calm, and there is no meaningful violence, sexual content, bullying, or hateful material in the provided videos. What is good for families is that the channel often explains how airports and planes work, shows geography and travel logistics, and keeps language mostly clean. The main concerns are that many videos repeatedly feature alcohol in a positive, luxury-focused way, including champagne, wine, cocktails, and bars, which can normalize adult drinking for children. There is also some mild clickbait and occasional mild language, plus a few dramatic adventure phrases like 'fight hurricane force winds' that may worry very young viewers without context. I would treat this as generally safe for school-age kids with parental awareness, but it is better suited to children old enough to understand that the luxury travel, alcohol, and credit-card-points talk are adult-oriented.
- 22/100 · safeMarques BrownleeAge: 7+
This creator makes polished videos about smartphones, laptops, and other consumer tech, usually explaining features, design choices, and whether products are worth buying. The good news is that the content is educational, calm, and focused on technology rather than pranks, cruelty, or adult themes. The main parent concern is consumerism: many videos highlight premium devices, prices, accessories, and sponsor products, which could make kids want expensive gadgets. There is also occasional mild language or crude humor, like the joke about "coughing to cover up a fart" in the LG rollable phone video at [03:05]. Some titles and thumbnails are a bit hype-driven or clicky, but the actual content stays informative. Overall, this is generally child-safe for school-age viewers, though I would still frame it as tech entertainment with subtle advertising pressure rather than purely educational content.
- 22/100 · safeRomAge: 7+
This creator makes fast, animated shorts explaining surprising facts, tricks, and internet-style stories in a playful way. Most of the content here is harmless and kid-friendly, such as mini golf tips, soda explanations, and how a magic trick works. The biggest concern is that some videos normalize or sensationalize dishonest behavior, like the Trevi Fountain story about a robber using a 'special magnetic sword' at 0:11, even though it ends with arrest and consequences. Another small concern is that the diamond video gives simplified testing advice that may be unreliable and could encourage kids to experiment with valuable items or copy 'hack' content without adult guidance. There is no strong profanity, sexual material, or graphic violence in the provided shorts. Overall, this looks generally suitable for older children with light parental awareness about imitation and sensationalized storytelling.
- 24/100 · safeRyan's WorldAge: 7+
Ryan's World makes fast, colorful shorts built around toys, pretend play, character jokes, counting games, and branded food tie-ins. What’s good is that the clips provided are mostly upbeat, simple, and clearly aimed at kids, with no obvious sexual content, hate, self-harm, or graphic violence. My main concern as a parent is how strongly the channel pushes products and hype: Ryan's World uses attention-grabbing titles like “McDonalds MESSED UP my Super Mario Galaxy Happy Meal!” and repeated branded content around McDonald’s and Mario, which can encourage nagging for toys and fast food. There is also some mild intensity in wording like Bowser Jr. looking “cool and menacing” and “demon hunter” branding, but it stays fantasy-level and not truly scary in these clips. A few shorts are so minimal or chaotic that they feel more like stimulation and marketing than meaningful content. I’d treat Ryan's World as generally okay for school-age kids in moderation, but I would watch with younger children and set limits around ads, merchandise, and fast-food tie-ins.
- 24/100 · safeNintendo of AmericaAge: 7+
This is Nintendo’s official channel, so the content is polished, brand-safe, and mostly focused on trailers, esports coverage, and game announcements. A lot of it is suitable for kids, especially the lighter videos like Tomodachi Life, which shows character creation, friendships, and silly island life. The main concerns are frequent combat themes and strong marketing: Splatoon videos constantly discuss "splats," "wipeouts," and competitive wins, and Pokémon Champions promotes online battling and progression systems. One ad-style video also includes mild insulting banter, with lines like "You're a natural six at best," which is not severe but may encourage teasing. Shorts and trailers are fast-paced and highly stimulating, which can strongly pull younger children toward more screen time and game spending interest. I’d say this channel is generally okay for school-age kids with some supervision, but parents of very young children should be aware of the competitive aggression, online-play focus, and heavy commercial promotion.
- 24/100 · safeRomina GafurAge: 7+
This creator makes polished tech videos about phones, tablets, customization, widgets, and hidden features. The good news is that the content is educational, calm, and free of explicit violence, sexual material, or abusive language. A parent should still note that the channel heavily promotes expensive devices and accessories, which may encourage kids to want upgrades or spend money, especially in sponsored sections like the ESR promotion at [2:19] in the iPad tips video. Some shorts are also more appearance- or hype-focused, such as praising selfie detail and looks at [0:22] in the Moto G short. There are occasional mentions of apps and platforms like TikTok, ads, and subscriptions, which can steer children toward more screen time or commercial content. Overall, this looks fine for older kids with guidance, but I would not treat it as ideal viewing for very young children because of the strong consumer and device-upgrade messaging.
- 24/100 · safeNashVibes ArtAge: 7+
This creator makes bright, fast-paced art challenge videos using unusual supplies like giant crayons, tiny pencils, stamp markers, and custom shirt or phone case designs. The good news is that the channel appears free of sexual material, graphic violence, hateful language, and drug content, so the overall tone is much safer than many entertainment channels. The main concern for parents is imitation: kids may want to copy messy or impractical stunts like giant-supply challenges, drawing on clothing or devices, or using equipment such as a heat press machine. For example, the shirt-customizing video introduces a heat press at [3:56], which is not a child-safe tool without close adult supervision. Some videos also push engagement with giveaway rules and comment prompts, which can strongly pull in younger viewers. Overall, this looks fine for school-age kids who enjoy art, but younger children should watch with supervision and clear rules about not using permanent markers, hot tools, or expensive household items.
- 24/100 · safeDream English KidsAge: 7+
This creator makes catchy educational songs for young children, especially for learning English, colors, counting, vehicles, animals, and simple vocabulary. A lot of the content is positive and classroom-friendly, with repeated prompts like finding objects, naming colors, and practicing words in a calm, structured way. From a parent perspective, the biggest strengths are the clear educational purpose, simple language, and lack of adult themes. The main concerns are a few videos that use spooky or fear-based material, including Halloween animals like a "scorpion" and "snake," and action songs where children are told to "Run" from spiders or big cats. Those moments are not graphic, but they may worry sensitive children or normalize fear/chase play for preschool viewers. Overall, this looks like a generally safe kids' learning channel, but I would supervise younger or easily frightened children and skip the Halloween, spider, and predator-themed videos.
- 24/100 · safeEpic GardeningAge: 7+
This creator makes gardening and homesteading videos about growing vegetables, flowers, fruit trees, and sometimes caring for backyard chickens. The good news is that the channel is strongly educational, calm in tone, and focused on practical outdoor skills rather than pranks, drama, or harmful trends. Most videos are safe for kids interested in plants, with useful lessons about seeds, harvesting, pruning, and garden experiments. The main concerns are occasional stronger wording that younger children could copy or misunderstand, like "chemical warfare" for plants, or animal-risk discussion in the chicken video about predators, freezing, and coop fires. A few thumbnails and shorts also use sensational language such as "I hacked my fig tree down" or "results were shocking," which is more clicky than harmful but still worth noting. Overall, this looks like a solid family-friendly gardening channel, but I would be more comfortable with school-age kids than very young children, especially for the chicken and pruning content.
- 24/100 · safeDo It On A DimeAge: 7+
This creator makes upbeat shopping, organizing, and DIY home videos centered on finding budget-friendly decor and household products. The positive side is that the content is nonviolent, nonsexual, and generally encouraging, with practical ideas for decorating, storage, and simple crafts. The biggest concern for kids is how heavily the videos push shopping and deals, often framing products as "luxury," "must-buy," or limited-time finds, which can encourage impulsive spending habits. There are also frequent sponsor promotions and incentive-style messages, including giveaway and cashback language, plus some DIY moments involving glue, irons, drilling, and lighting modifications that younger children should not copy unsupervised. Shorts especially use fast, flashy, click-driven language that may strongly hook younger viewers into wanting products rather than learning a skill. Overall, this is much safer than most entertainment content, but I would treat it as supervised lifestyle-shopping content rather than ideal viewing for very young children.
- 24/100 · safeWolfeyVGCAge: 7+
This creator makes detailed videos and shorts about competitive Pokémon, usually explaining strategy, game mechanics, and tournament play in an educational and enthusiastic way. The overall tone is friendly and there is no explicit sexual content, drug content, hate speech, or serious real-world violence. The main things a cautious parent may notice are frequent fantasy battle themes, intense competitive language, and some thumbnails that use scary or aggressive monster imagery to grab attention. There is also regular promotion of subscriptions, Patreon, and products, including a limited-time notebook sale, so younger children may need help recognizing marketing. A few jokes use mild edgy phrasing, like calling a move a "delete button" at [0:55], but the content stays within game discussion. For most kids who already like Pokémon, this looks generally okay with light supervision, especially for younger or more sensitive viewers.
- 24/100 · safeForgeCoreAge: 7+
This creator makes short videos about designing clever 3D-printed objects and turning games into book-shaped storage builds. Most of the content is inventive, educational, and centered on prototyping, magnets, hinges, and storage solutions for board games. The biggest concern is a short about Hangman, where the figure is designed to "fall automatically" [0:00] and "drop exactly when he's supposed to" [0:11], which references a classic execution-themed game that some parents may find uncomfortable for younger kids. There is also a mild adult lifestyle mention in the top-designs short about a bath accessory for holding "wine" and lighting candles "to set the mood" at [0:11]. Aside from those moments, the channel appears non-hostile, non-sexual, and free of dangerous behavior. I would generally recommend it for children with light parental awareness around the Hangman-themed short.
- 24/100 · safeBigheadjusticeAge: 7+
This creator makes detailed natural hair education videos about curl type, porosity, strand thickness, product choice, and length retention. A lot of the content is practical and science-leaning, and there is no obvious sexual content, violence, dangerous behavior, or abusive language. The biggest concern for kids is that the channel is very appearance-centered and sometimes frames hair problems in a way that could make sensitive viewers feel behind, flawed, or pressured to fix themselves. For example, videos repeatedly focus on hair being "stuck," looking "boneless," or needing the "right" routine, and some thumbnails use urgent or fear-based wording. There is also frequent promotion of quizzes, paid guides, and products, which makes some videos feel a bit commercial. Overall, this looks fairly safe for older children and teens with parental awareness, but it is better suited to viewers mature enough to handle beauty-content comparison without taking it personally.
- 24/100 · safeKidTimeStoryTimeAge: 7+
This creator makes energetic read-aloud videos and shorts built around children's books, puppets, humor, and colorful voices. The strongest positive is that the channel promotes reading, imagination, honesty, kindness, and being yourself, with clear child-friendly educational intent. Concerns are mostly mild: some stories include teasing or exclusion, such as kids mocking Camilla in "A Bad Case of Stripes" at [04:01], and some recurring puppet jokes use spooky or threatening language for laughs, like "You look delicious" at [01:35] and "before we're fried" at [06:40]. A few videos also use chaotic, high-energy delivery and clickbait-style prompts to like and subscribe, which may overstimulate very young viewers. There is no sign of sexual material, substance use, hate speech, or truly dangerous conduct. Overall, this looks appropriate for most school-age children, but very sensitive preschoolers may need parent previewing for the louder spooky humor and social teasing themes.
- 26/100 · safeLike NastyaAge: 7+
Like Nastya makes bright, highly produced kids' videos with pretend play, songs, holiday themes, simple learning, and family-friendly adventures. There is a lot that parents may like: alphabet learning, friendship messages, imaginative play, and generally non-explicit content. The main concerns are strong toy and brand marketing, especially in videos that directly say they are ads, plus luxury and gift-focused content that may create pressure for toys, parties, cruises, or expensive experiences. Some videos also use spooky or chaotic scenes that may be too intense for very sensitive younger children, such as Halloween scares and the Grinch trapping scene. A few challenge-style moments and rough slapstick comedy could encourage imitation, though they are not severe. Overall, this looks much safer than many large kids' channels, but I would still recommend parental supervision for younger viewers because of the advertising, consumerism, and occasional scary moments.
- 28/100 · safeJessi & AlessioAge: 7+
This creator couple makes family vlogs about culture, relationships, and especially their baby Lorenzo’s premature birth and NICU progress. There are positive elements: loving parents, hopeful updates, gentle tone, and no profanity-heavy, sexual, or hateful material. The biggest issue for kids is that many videos center on stressful hospital experiences, medical equipment, bleeding scares, breathing support, and discussions of possible surgery or complications. Some children may feel worried or upset by lines about "bleeding episode" and emergency monitoring, especially in the more dramatic NICU update videos. Older children who are prepared for medical topics may handle it fine, but sensitive younger viewers could find it scary or confusing. I would recommend this channel for children only with parental awareness, and I would be more cautious with the hospital-focused videos than with the lighter family shorts.
- 28/100 · safeCRAZY MIDDLESAge: 7+
This creator makes upbeat family vlogs about a very large adoptive family, with holiday activities, sibling Q&As, food outings, and sponsored product reviews. The positive side is that the channel often shows family bonding, everyday routines, and pro-adoption messaging, and most videos do not contain sexual content, drugs, or serious violence. My main concern as a parent is that some videos use children’s embarrassment or conflict for entertainment, especially the Easter video where a little child is prompted to say "bad words" and repeats "What the hell" on camera. There is also some mild teasing and comparison content in the sibling video, with prompts like "Who is the most annoying?" and "Who is mom's favorite?" that can normalize rivalry and social exclusion. A few moments also model poor habits for kids, like making a game out of ordering lots of fast food and a joking line about "We're shooting people" in traffic. Overall, this looks relatively light-risk for older children, but I would be more cautious with younger kids because of the clickbait framing around children, mild profanity, and family-drama-style humor.
- 29/100 · safeVlad and NikiAge: 7+
This creator makes bright, fast-paced pretend-play videos starring children in adventures with toys, superheroes, crafts, science-style activities, and roleplay. The good side is that the tone is cheerful, there is no sexual content or serious profanity, and some episodes include helpful lessons about sharing, teamwork, creativity, outdoor play, and safety. My main concern as a parent is imitation risk: kids are shown around bubbling experiment setups, slime ingredients, magnets, fishing gear, car restoration tools, and even welding, which can look easy and fun without enough real-world caution. There is also frequent fantasy conflict and chase play, including lines about revenge, fighting, arrests, monsters, and weapons, even though it is presented in a silly child-friendly way. The channel is also highly stimulating and sometimes promotional, including app advertising and event promotions aimed at young fans. Overall, this is much safer than many general-audience channels, but I would still recommend supervision for younger children because of risky imitation, intense pacing, and normalized action play.
- 29/100 · safeBaby Shark - Pinkfong Kids’ Songs & StoriesAge: 7+
This creator makes brightly colored songs, nursery-style videos, and simple learning content clearly aimed at young children. There is a lot of positive material here, including shape-learning content and familiar sing-along songs with no sexual, drug, hate, or self-harm concerns. The main caution is that some videos and thumbnails mix preschool branding with spooky or danger-themed ideas, such as zombie sharks, Halloween monsters, lava emergencies, and scary dental imagery. In the transcripted content, the strongest concern is the Halloween/zombie video, which includes lines like "Creepy creepy zombie sharks" and repeated accusation-style exchanges about lying. Even the classic Baby Shark content includes mild chase framing like "Let's go hunt" and "Run away," which is common in children's songs but may still be worth noting for very sensitive kids. Overall, this looks much safer than most general YouTube channels, but parents of toddlers should preview the spooky or fear-based videos and thumbnails rather than assuming all uploads are equally gentle.
- 34/100 · medium riskA for Adley - Learning & FunAge: 7+
This creator makes bright, energetic family videos with kids, parents, toys, travel, playgrounds, and animal experiences. A lot of the content is cheerful and cooperative, with siblings playing games, doing crafts, and exploring places together. The main concerns are not explicit adult themes, but child-safety issues: risky climbing and slide play are presented as thrilling, especially in the park video, and exotic animals are handled very casually in the cafe video. There is also frequent high-intensity shouting, competition, and clickbait-style presentation that can overstimulate younger children. Some shorts include prank-style content like tricking someone with hot sauce ice cream, which is mild but still models deceptive behavior. I would call this generally family-friendly with supervision, but parents should be cautious about imitation of unsafe playground stunts and animal handling.
- 34/100 · medium riskKIDZ BOPAge: 7+
KIDZ BOP is a polished music channel made for families, with kid performers singing cleaned-up versions of popular songs and upbeat visualizers. The overall tone is bright, energetic, and much safer than mainstream pop, with no obvious profanity, drugs, graphic violence, or explicit sexual material in the provided videos. The main concern is that many songs still center on romance, attraction, and relationship drama, such as "Would you tremble if I touched your lips?" in "Hero" and "I just might make her my baby" in the Short. Some lyrics may also confuse younger children because they keep adult emotional themes even after being cleaned up, like arguments, jealousy, and intense devotion in "I'm Real." "Survivor" is the strongest positive example because it promotes resilience and even rejects online insults at [2:16]. I would call this generally family-friendly for school-age kids, but parents of very young children may want to choose songs selectively and co-listen.
- 39/100 · medium risk✿ Kids Diana ShowAge: 7+
This creator makes bright, fast-paced kids videos with pretend play, fantasy adventures, toy stories, holiday themes, and some educational moments like recycling, shapes, and animals. There are positives for children: teamwork, helping pets, cleaning up trash, and simple learning concepts are repeated often. The main concern is that many videos rely on exaggerated danger, chase scenes, shouting, and conflict to keep attention, such as "We need to save her" at [14:11] in the pet rescue video and repeated monster/dinosaur threat scenes in the dinosaur video. One stronger concern is the princess story, which includes possessive dating behavior and trapping language like "Now stay there" at [11:46] and "The prince is mine" at [17:30], which models unhealthy relationship behavior for kids. Some shorts also normalize sneaking prohibited items, such as "We're busted. Run" at [0:35] in "Kids Sneak Candy" and "Security will never find out" at [0:00] in "Kid Sneaks Gum into Cinema." I would call this a mixed channel: okay for many school-age kids with supervision, but not ideal for very young or sensitive children because the clickbait danger and conflict are frequent. Parents may want to preview videos and steer children toward the more educational entries rather than the chase-and-peril stories.
- 56/100 · medium riskThe Axel ShowAge: 7+
The creator makes family adventure videos centered on trucks, animals, outdoor play, and imaginative games, and the tone is usually upbeat and affectionate. There are positive elements for kids, including curiosity about nature, parent-child bonding, and encouragement to play creatively outside. The main concern is that the channel often presents unsafe situations in a fun, normalized way, such as touching wild animals, being close to heavy equipment, and discussing tools like a chainsaw around children. Some examples include the octopus rescue where the child is told to touch the animal at [0:11]-[0:22], the excavator video where pets and children are near active machinery at [0:42]-[0:54], and a pretend fire joke in the fishing short at [2:04]-[2:26]. There is also mild fantasy/game violence in the Minecraft zombie video with repeated lines like "they will die" at [2:06]-[2:17]. I would recommend parents preview videos first and watch together, especially for younger children who may imitate what they see.
Other categories
FAQ
What age range is this list for?
A 7+ recommendation means content is appropriate for 7-year-olds and older — typically grades 1-6. Pace and complexity require school-age maturity but there's still no adult content or profanity.
How is this different from the 4+ category?
The 4+ category covers cartoons for the youngest (simple plots, short episodes, slow pace). 7+ covers content needing more focus — faster cuts, longer arcs, video games, light humor.
Is the list complete?
No — these are creators someone has already analyzed in CheckerAI. The list grows with each new analysis.