A live Melbourne traffic utility watched thousands of times per week. This page shares the latest performance snapshot of the West Gate Bridge live stream on YouTube.
These numbers show how often Melburnians – and viewers around the world – are checking the West Gate Bridge before they travel.
A high average view duration and strong net subscriber growth indicate that viewers are finding the live stream genuinely useful and returning often.
The main West Gate Bridge live stream is currently the dominant source of views and watch time for the channel.
You can watch the live stream here: West Gate Bridge Live Stream on YouTube
These insights show how people discover the West Gate Bridge live stream and the types of devices they use to watch it.
YouTube search, suggested videos and browse features are key for pulling in new and returning viewers to the stream.
Device mix (phones, desktops, TVs) gives a sense of where the stream is being used – at home, at work, or on the move.
Comparing subscribed vs non-subscribed viewers highlights how much of the audience has committed to following the channel.
The West Gate Bridge stream behaves like a real-time utility, but viewers also come back later to replay key moments.
This split shows how much of the usage is people checking conditions live vs watching after the fact.
High-level age and gender data comes from YouTube's aggregated audience reporting and is rounded for privacy.
A monthly view of how total views, watch time and subscriber growth have evolved over the last year.
Roughly 220,000 vehicles cross the West Gate Bridge every day. Even a small percentage of motorists checking the live view before they travel translates to thousands of highly engaged, highly motivated viewers each week.
The West Gate Bridge live stream is designed as a public-minded utility: it helps people decide whether to cross now, wait, or reroute — while also showcasing Spotswood, Hobsons Bay, and Melbourne to a global audience.
Stats on this page update from an internal daily YouTube snapshot process. Figures shown here reflect the latest successful snapshot at the time indicated above.